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PART TWO.
Part 1
We have explained under what conditions 'combination',
'contact', and 'action-passion' are attributable
to the things which undergo natural change.
Further, we have discussed 'unqualified'
coming-to-be and passing-away, and explained
under what conditions they are predicable,
of what subject, and owing to what cause.
Similarly, we have also discussed 'alteration',
and explained what 'altering' is and how
it differs from coming-to-be and passing-away.
But we have still to investigate the so-called
'elements' of bodies.
For the complex substances whose formation
and maintenance are due to natural processes
all presuppose the perceptible bodies as
the condition of their coming-to-be and passing-away:
but philosophers disagree in regard to the
matter which underlies these perceptible
bodies. Some maintain it is single, supposing
it to be, e.g. Air or Fire, or an 'intermediate'
between these two (but still a body with
a separate existence). Others, on the contrary,
postulate two or more materials-ascribing
to their 'association' and 'dissociation',
or to their 'alteration', the coming-to-be
and passing-away of things. (Some, for instance,
postulate Fire and Earth: some add Air, making
three: and some, like Empedocles, reckon
Water as well, thus postulating four.)
Now we may agree that the primary materials,
whose change (whether it be 'association
and dissociation' or a process of another
kind) results in coming-to-be and passingaway,
are rightly described as 'originative sources,
i.e. elements'. But (i) those thinkers are
in error who postulate, beside the bodies
we have mentioned, a single matter-and that
corporeal and separable matter. For this
'body' of theirs cannot possibly exist without
a 'perceptible contrariety': this 'Boundless',
which some thinkers identify with the 'original
real', must be either light or heavy, either
cold or hot. And (ii) what Plato has written
in the Timaeus is not based on any precisely-articulated
conception. For he has not stated clearly
whether his 'Omnirecipient" exists in
separation from the 'elements'; nor does
he make any use of it. He says, indeed, that
it is a substratum prior to the so-called
'elements'-underlying them, as gold underlies
the things that are fashioned of gold. (And
yet this comparison, if thus expressed, is
itself open to criticism. Things which come-to-be
and pass-away cannot be called by the name
of the material out of which they have come-tobe:
it is only the results of 'alteration' which
retain the name of the substratum whose 'alterations'
they are. However, he actually says' that
the truest account is to affirm that each
of them is "gold"'.) Nevertheless
he carries his analysis of the 'elements'-solids
though they are-back to 'planes', and it
is impossible for 'the Nurse' (i.e. the primary
matter) to be identical with 'the planes'.
Our own doctrine is that although there is
a matter of the perceptible bodies (a matter
out of which the so-called 'clements' come-to-be),
it has no separate existence, but is always
bound up with a contrariety. A more precise
account of these presuppositions has been
given in another work': we must, however,
give a detailed explanation of the primary
bodies as well, since they too are similarly
derived from the matter. We must reckon as
an 'originative source' and as 'primary'
the matter which underlies, though it is
inseparable from, the contrary qualities:
for the hot' is not matter for 'the cold'
nor 'the cold' for 'the hot', but the substratum
is matter for them both. We therefore have
to recognize three 'originative sources':
firstly that which potentially perceptible
body, secondly the contrarieties (I mean,
e.g. heat and cold), and thirdly Fire, Water,
and the like. Only 'thirdly', however: for
these bodies change into one another (they
are not immutable as Empedocles and other
thinkers assert, since 'alteration' would
then have been impossible), whereas the contrarieties
do not change.
Nevertheless, even so the question remains:
What sorts of contrarieties, and how many
of them, are to be accounted 'originative
sources' of body? For all the other thinkers
assume and use them without explaining why
they are these or why they are just so many.
Part 2
Since, then, we are looking for 'originative
sources' of perceptible body; and since 'perceptible'
is equivalent to 'tangible', and 'tangible'
is that of which the perception is touch;
it is clear that not all the contrarieties
constitute 'forms' and 'originative sources'
of body, but only those which correspond
to touch. For it is in accordance with a
contrariety-a contrariety, moreover, of tangible
qualities-that the primary bodies are differentiated.
That is why neither whiteness (and blackness),
nor sweetness (and bitterness), nor (similarly)
any quality belonging to the other perceptible
contrarieties either, constitutes an 'element'.
And yet vision is prior to touch, so that
its object also is prior to the object of
touch. The object of vision, however, is
a quality of tangible body not qua tangible,
but qua something else-qua something which
may well be naturally prior to the object
of touch.
Accordingly, we must segregate the tangible
differences and contrarieties, and distinguish
which amongst them are primary. Contrarieties
correlative to touch are the following: hot-cold,
dry-moist, heavy-light, hard-soft, viscous-brittle,
rough-smooth, coarse-fine. Of these (i) heavy
and light are neither active nor susceptible.
Things are not called 'heavy' and 'light'
because they act upon, or suffer action from,
other things. But the 'elements' must be
reciprocally active and susceptible, since
they 'combine' and are transformed into one
another. On the other hand (ii) hot and cold,
and dry and moist, are terms, of which the
first pair implies power to act and the second
pair susceptibility. 'Hot' is that which
'associates' things of the same kind (for
'dissociating', which people attribute to
Fire as its function, is 'associating' things
of the same class, since its effect is to
eliminate what is foreign), while 'cold'
is that which brings together, i.e. 'associates',
homogeneous and heterogeneous things alike.
And moise is that which, being readily adaptable
in shape, is not determinable by any limit
of its own: while 'dry' is that which is
readily determinable by its own limit, but
not readily adaptable in shape.
From moist and dry are derived (iii) the
fine and coarse, viscous and brittle, hard
and soft, and the remaining tangible differences.
For (a) since the moist has no determinate
shape, but is readily adaptable and follows
the outline of that which is in contact with
it, it is characteristic of it to be 'such
as to fill up'. Now 'the fine' is 'such as
to fill up'. For the fine' consists of subtle
particles; but that which consists of small
particles is 'such as to fill up', inasmuch
as it is in contact whole with whole-and
'the fine' exhibits this character in a superlative
degree. Hence it is evident that the fine
derives from the moist, while the coarse
derives from the dry. Again (b) the viscous'
derives from the moist: for 'the viscous'
(e.g. oil) is a 'moist' modified in a certain
way. 'The brittle', on the other hand, derives
from the dry: for 'brittle' is that which
is completely dry-so completely, that its
solidification has actually been due to failure
of moisture. Further (c) 'the soft' derives
from the moist. For 'soft' is that which
yields to pressure by retiring into itself,
though it does not yield by total displacement
as the moist does-which explains why the
moist is not 'soft', although 'the soft'
derives from the moist. 'The hard', on the
other hand, derives from the dry: for 'hard'
is that which is solidified, and the solidified
is dry.
The terms 'dry' and 'moist' have more senses
than one. For 'the damp', as well as the
moist, is opposed to the dry: and again 'the
solidified', as well as the dry, is opposed
to the moist. But all these qualities derive
from the dry and moist we mentioned first.'
For (i) the dry is opposed to the damp: i.e.
'damp' is that which has foreign moisture
on its surface ('sodden' being that which
is penetrated to its core), while 'dry' is
that which has lost foreign moisture. Hence
it is evident that the damp will derive from
the moist, and 'the dry' which is opposed
to it will derive from the primary dry. Again
(ii) the 'moist' and the solidified derive
in the same way from the primary pair. For
'moist' is that which contains moisture of
its-own deep within it ('sodden' being that
which is deeply penetrated by foreign mosture),
whereas 'solidigied' is that which has lost
this inner moisture. Hence these too derive
from the primary pair, the 'solidified' from
the dry and the 'solidified' from the dry
the 'liquefiable' from the moist.
It is clear, then, that all the other differences
reduce to the first four, but that these
admit of no further reduction. For the hot
is not essentially moist or dry, nor the
moist essentially hot or cold: nor are the
cold and the dry derivative forms, either
of one another or of the hot and the moist.
Hence these must be four.
Part 3
The elementary qualities are four, and any
four terms can be combined in six couples.
Contraries, however, refuse to be coupled:
for it is impossible for the same thing to
be hot and cold, or moist and dry. Hence
it is evident that the 'couplings' of the
elementary qualities will be four: hot with
dry and moist with hot, and again cold with
dry and cold with moist. And these four couples
have attached themselves to the apparently
'simple' bodies (Fire, Air, Water, and Earth)
in a manner consonant with theory. For Fire
is hot and dry, whereas Air is hot and moist
(Air being a sort of aqueous vapour); and
Water is cold and moist, while Earth is cold
and dry. Thus the differences are reasonably
distributed among the primary bodies, and
the number of the latter is consonant with
theory. For all who make the simple bodies
'elements' postulate either one, or two,
or three, or four. Now (i) those who assert
there is one only, and then generate everything
else by condensation and rarefaction, are
in effect making their 'originative sources'
two, viz. the rare and the dense, or rather
the hot and the cold: for it is these which
are the moulding forces, while the 'one'
underlies them as a 'matter'. But (ii) those
who postulate two from the start-as Parmenides
postulated Fire and Earth-make the intermediates
(e.g. Air and Water) blends of these. The
same course is followed (iii) by those who
advocate three. (We may compare what Plato
does in Me Divisions': for he makes 'the
middle' a blend.) Indeed, there is practically
no difference between those who postulate
two and those who postulate three, except
that the former split the middle 'element'
into two, while the latter treat it as only
one. But (iv) some advocate four from the
start, e.g. Empedocles: yet he too draws
them together so as to reduce them to the
two, for he opposes all the others to Fire.
In fact, however, fire and air, and each
of the bodies we have mentioned, are not
simple, but blended. The 'simple' bodies
are indeed similar in nature to them, but
not identical with them. Thus the 'simple'
body corresponding to fire is 'such-as-fire,
not fire: that which corresponds to air is
'such-as-air': and so on with the rest of
them. But fire is an excess of heat, just
as ice is an excess of cold. For freezing
and boiling are excesses of heat and cold
respectively. Assuming, therefore, that ice
is a freezing of moist and cold, fire analogously
will be a boiling of dry and hot: a fact,
by the way, which explains why nothing comes-to-be
either out of ice or out of fire.
The 'simple' bodies, since they are four,
fall into two pairs which belong to the two
regions, each to each: for Fire and Air are
forms of the body moving towards the 'limit',
while Earth and Water are forms of the body
which moves towards the 'centre'. Fire and
Earth, moreover, are extremes and purest:
Water and Air, on the contrary are intermediates
and more like blends. And, further, the members
of either pair are contrary to those of the
other, Water being contrary to Fire and Earth
to Air; for the qualities constituting Water
and Earth are contrary to those that constitute
Fire and Air. Nevertheless, since they are
four, each of them is characterized par excellence
a single quality: Earth by dry rather than
by cold, Water by cold rather than by moist,
Air by moist rather than by hot, and Fire
by hot rather than by dry.
Part 4
It has been established before' that the
coming-to-be of the 'simple' bodies is reciprocal.
At the same time, it is manifest, even on
the evidence of perception, that they do
come-to-be: for otherwise there would not
have been 'alteration, since 'alteration'
is change in respect to the qualities of
the objects of touch. Consequently, we must
explain (i) what is the manner of their reciprocal
transformation, and (ii) whether every one
of them can come to-be out of every one-or
whether some can do so, but not others.
Now it is evident that all of them are by
nature such as to change into one another:
for coming-to-be is a change into contraries
and out of contraries, and the 'elements'
all involve a contrariety in their mutual
relations because their distinctive qualities
are contrary. For in some of them both qualities
are contrary-e.g. in Fire and Water, the
first of these being dry and hot, and the
second moist and cold: while in others one
of the qualities (though only one) is contrary-e.g.
in Air and Water, the first being moist and
hot, and the second moist and cold. It is
evident, therefore, if we consider them in
general, that every one is by nature such
as to come-to-be out of every one: and when
we come to consider them severally, it is
not difficult to see the manner in which
their transformation is effected. For, though
all will result from all, both the speed
and the facility of their conversion will
differ in degree.
Thus (i) the process of conversion will be
quick between those which have interchangeable
'complementary factors', but slow between
those which have none. The reason is that
it is easier for a single thing to change
than for many. Air, e.g. will result from
Fire if a single quality changes: for Fire,
as we saw, is hot and dry while Air is hot
and moist, so that there will be Air if the
dry be overcome by the moist. Again, Water
will result from Air if the hot be overcome
by the cold: for Air, as we saw, is hot and
moist while Water is cold and moist, so that,
if the hot changes, there will be Water.
So too, in the same manner, Earth will result
from Water and Fire from Earth, since the
two 'elements' in both these couples have
interchangeable 'complementary factors'.
For Water is moist and cold while Earth is
cold and dry-so that, if the moist be overcome,
there will be Earth: and again, since Fire
is dry and hot while Earth is cold and dry,
Fire will result from Earth if the cold pass-away.
It is evident, therefore, that the coming-to-be
of the 'simple' bodies will be cyclical;
and that this cyclical method of transformation
is the easiest, because the consecutive 'clements'
contain interchangeable 'complementary factors'.
On the other hand (ii) the transformation
of Fire into Water and of Air into Earth,
and again of Water and Earth into Fire and
Air respectively, though possible, is more
difficult because it involves the change
of more qualities. For if Fire is to result
from Water, both the cold and the moist must
pass-away: and again, both the cold and the
dry must pass-away if Air is to result from
Earth. So' too, if Water and Earth are to
result from Fire and Air respectively-both
qualities must change.
This second method of coming-to-be, then,
takes a longer time. But (iii) if one quality
in each of two 'elements' pass-away, the
transformation, though easier, is not reciprocal.
Still, from Fire plus Water there will result
Earth and Air, and from Air plus Earth Fire
and Water. For there will be Air, when the
cold of the Water and the dry of the Fire
have passed-away (since the hot of the latter
and the moist of the former are left): whereas,
when the hot of the Fire and the moist of
the Water have passed-away, there will be
Earth, owing to the survival of the dry of
the Fire and the cold of the Water. So, too,
in the same Way, Fire and Water will result
from Air plus Earth. For there will be Water,
when the hot of the Air and the dry of the
Earth have passed-away (since the moist of
the former and the cold of the latter are
left): whereas, when the moist of the Air
and the cold of the Earth have passed-away,
there will be Fire, owing to the survival
of the hot of the Air and the dry of the
Earth-qualities essentially constitutive
of Fire. Moreover, this mode of Fire's coming-to-be
is confirmed by perception. For flame is
par excellence Fire: but flame is burning
smoke, and smoke consists of Air and Earth.
No transformation, however, into any of the
'simple' bodies can result from the passingaway
of one elementary quality in each of two
'elements' when they are taken in their consecutive
order, because either identical or contrary
qualities are left in the pair: but no 'simple'
body can be formed either out of identical,
or out of contrary, qualities. Thus no 'simple'
body would result, if the dry of Fire and
the moist of Air were to pass-away: for the
hot is left in both. On the other hand, if
the hot pass-away out both, the contraries-dry
and moist-are left. A similar result will
occur in all the others too: for all the
consecutive 'elements' contain one identical,
and one contrary, quality. Hence, too, it
clearly follows that, when one of the consecutive
'elements' is transformed into one, the coming-to-be
is effected by the passing-away of a single
quality: whereas, when two of them are transformed
into a third, more than one quality must
have passedaway.
We have stated that all the 'elements' come-to-be
out of any one of them; and we have explained
the manner in which their mutual conversion
takes place. Let us nevertheless supplement
our theory by the following speculations
concerning them.
Part 5
If Water, Air, and the like are a 'matter'
of which the natural bodies consist, as some
thinkers in fact believe, these 'clements'
must be either one, or two, or more. Now
they cannot all of them be one-they cannot,
e.g. all be Air or Water or Fire or Earth-because
'Change is into contraries'. For if they
all were Air, then (assuming Air to persist)
there will be 'alteration' instead of coming-to-be.
Besides, nobody supposes a single 'element'
to persist, as the basis of all, in such
a way that it is Water as well as Air (or
any other 'element') at the same time. So
there will be a certain contrariety, i.e.
a differentiating quality: and the other
member of this contrariety, e.g. heat, will
belong to some other 'element', e.g. to Fire.
But Fire will certainly not be 'hot Air'.
For a change of that kind (a) is 'alteration',
and (b) is not what is observed. Moreover
(c) if Air is again to result out of the
Fire, it will do so by the conversion of
the hot into its contrary: this contrary,
therefore, will belong to Air, and Air will
be a cold something: hence it is impossible
for Fire to be 'hot Air', since in that case
the same thing will be simultaneously hot
and cold. Both Fire and Air, therefore, will
be something else which is the same; i.e.
there will be some 'matter', other than either,
common to both.
The same argument applies to all the 'elements',
proving that there is no single one of them
out of which they all originate. But neither
is there, beside these four, some other body
from which they originate-a something intermediate,
e.g. between Air and Water (coarser than
Air, but finer than Water), or between Air
and Fire (coarser than Fire, but finer than
Air). For the supposed 'intermediate' will
be Air and Fire when a pair of contrasted
qualities is added to it: but, since one
of every two contrary qualities is a 'privation',
the 'intermediate' never can exist-as some
thinkers assert the 'Boundless' or the 'Environing'
exists-in isolation. It is, therefore, equally
and indifferently any one of the 'elements',
or else it is nothing.
Since, then, there is nothing-at least, nothing
perceptible-prior to these, they must be
all. That being so, either they must always
persist and not be transformable into one
another: or they must undergo transformation-either
all of them, or some only (as Plato wrote
in the Timacus).' Now it has been proved
before that they must undergo reciprocal
transformation. It has also been proved that
the speed with which they come-to-be, one
out of another, is not uniform-since the
process of reciprocal transformation is relatively
quick between the 'elements' with a 'complementary
factor', but relatively slow between those
which possess no such factor. Assuming, then,
that the contrariety, in respect to which
they are transformed, is one, the elements'
will inevitably be two: for it is 'matter'
that is the 'mean' between the two contraries,
and matter is imperceptible and inseparable
from them. Since, however, the 'elements'
are seen to be more than two, the contrarieties
must at the least be two. But the contrarieties
being two, the 'elements' must be four (as
they evidently are) and cannot be three:
for the couplings' are four, since, though
six are possible, the two in which the qualities
are contrary to one another cannot occur.
These subjects have been discussed before:'
but the following arguments will make it
clear that, since the 'elements' are transformed
into one another, it is impossible for any
one of them-whether it be at the end or in
the middle-to be an 'originative source'
of the rest. There can be no such 'originative
element' at the ends: for all of them would
then be Fire or Earth, and this theory amounts
to the assertion that all things are made
of Fire or Earth. Nor can a 'middle-element'
be such an originative source'-as some thinkers
suppose that Air is transformed both into
Fire and into Water, and Water both into
Air and into Earth, while the 'end-elements'
are not further transformed into one another.
For the process must come to a stop, and
cannot continue ad infinitum in a straight
line in either direction, since otherwise
an infinite number of contrarieties would
attach to the single 'element'. Let E stand
for Earth, W for Water, A for Air, and F
for Fire. Then (i) since A is transformed
into F and W, there will be a contrariety
belonging to A F. Let these contraries be
whiteness and blackness. Again (ii) since
A is transformed into W, there will be another
contrariety: for W is not the same as F.
Let this second contrariety be dryness and
moistness, D being dryness and M moistness.
Now if, when A is transformed into W, the
'white' persists, Water will be moist and
white: but if it does not persist, Water
will be black since change is into contraries.
Water, therefore, must be either white or
black. Let it then be the first. On similar
grounds, therefore, D (dryness) will also
belong to F. Consequently F (Fire) as well
as Air will be able to be transformed into
Water: for it has qualities contrary to those
of Water, since Fire was first taken to be
black and then to be dry, while Water was
moist and then showed itself white. Thus
it is evident that all the 'elements' will
be able to be transformed out of one another;
and that, in the instances we have taken,
E (Earth) also will contain the remaining
two 'complementary factors', viz. the black
and the moist (for these have not yet been
coupled).
We have dealt with this last topic before
the thesis we set out to prove. That thesis-viz.
that the process cannot continue ad infinitum-will
be clear from the following considerations.
If Fire (which is represented by F) is not
to revert, but is to be transformed in turn
into some other 'element' (e.g. into Q),
a new contrariety, other than those mentioned,
will belong to Fire and Q: for it has been
assumed that Q is not the same as any of
the four, E W A and F. Let K, then, belong
to F and Y to Q. Then K will belong to all
four, E W A and F: for they are transformed
into one another. This last point, however,
we may admit, has not yet been proved: but
at any rate it is clear that if Q is to be
transformed in turn into yet another 'element',
yet another contrariety will belong not only
to Q but also to F (Fire). And, similarly,
every addition of a new 'element' will carry
with it the attachment of a new contrariety
to the preceding elements'. Consequently,
if the 'elements' are infinitely many, there
will also belong to the single 'element'
an infinite number of contrarieties. But
if that be so, it will be impossible to define
any 'element': impossible also for any to
come-to-be. For if one is to result from
another, it will have to pass through such
a vast number of contrarieties-and indeed
even more than any determinate number. Consequently
(i) into some 'elements' transformation will
never be effected-viz. if the intermediates
are infinite in number, as they must be if
the 'elements' are infinitely many: further
(ii) there will not even be a transformation
of Air into Fire, if the contrarieties are
infinitely many: moreover (iii) all the 'elements'
become one. For all the contrarieties of
the 'elements' above F must belong to those
below F, and vice versa: hence they will
all be one.
Part 6
As for those who agree with Empedocles that
the 'elements' of body are more than one,
so that they are not transformed into one
another-one may well wonder in what sense
it is open to them to maintain that the 'elements'
are comparable. Yet Empedocles says 'For
these are all not only equal...'
If it is meant that they are comparable in
their amount, all the 'comparables' must
possess an identical something whereby they
are measured. If, e.g. one pint of Water
yields ten of Air, both are measured by the
same unit; and therefore both were from the
first an identical something. On the other
hand, suppose (ii) they are not 'comparable
in their amount' in the sense that so-much
of the one yields so much of the other, but
comparable in 'power of action (a pint of
Water, e.g. having a power of cooling equal
to that of ten pints of Air); even so, they
are 'comparable in their amount', though
not qua 'amount' but qua Iso-much power'.
There is also (iii) a third possibility.
Instead of comparing their powers by the
measure of their amount, they might be compared
as terms in a 'correspondence': e.g. 'as
x is hot, so correspondingly y is white'.
But 'correspondence', though it means equality
in the quantum, means similarity in a quale.
Thus it is manifestly absurd that the 'simple'
bodies, though they are not transformable,
are comparable not merely as 'corresponding',
but by a measure of their powers; i.e. that
so-much Fire is comparable with many times-that-amount
of Air, as being 'equally' or 'similarly'
hot. For the same thing, if it be greater
in amount, will, since it belongs to the
same kind, have its ratio correspondingly
increased.
A further objection to the theory of Empedocles
is that it makes even growth impossible,
unless it be increase by addition. For his
Fire increases by Fire: 'And Earth increases
its own frame and Ether increases Ether."
These, however, are cases of addition: but
it is not by addition that growing things
are believed to increase. And it is far more
difficult for him to account for the coming-to-be
which occurs in nature. For the things which
come-to-be by natural process all exhibit,
in their coming-to-be, a uniformity either
absolute or highly regular: while any exceptions
any results which are in accordance neither
with the invariable nor with the general
rule are products of chance and luck. Then
what is the cause determining that man comes-to-be
from man, that wheat (instead of an olive)
comes-to-be from wheat, either invariably
or generally? Are we to say 'Bone comes-to-be
if the "elements" be put together
in such-and such a manner'? For, according
to his own estatements, nothing comes-to-be
from their 'fortuitous consilience', but
only from their 'consilience' in a certain
proportion. What, then, is the cause of this
proportional consilience? Presumably not
Fire or Earth. But neither is it Love and
Strife: for the former is a cause of 'association'
only, and the latter only of 'dissociation'.
No: the cause in question is the essential
nature of each thing-not merely to quote
his words) 'a mingling and a divorce of what
has been mingled'. And chance, not proportion,
'is the name given to these occurrences':
for things can be 'mingled' fortuitously.
The cause, therefore, of the coming-to-be
of the things which owe their existence to
nature is that they are in such-and-such
a determinate condition: and it is this which
constitutes, the 'nature' of each thing-a
'nature' about which he says nothing. What
he says, therefore, is no explanation of
'nature'. Moreover, it is this which is both
'the excellence' of each thing and its 'good':
whereas he assigns the whole credit to the
'mingling'. (And yet the 'elements' at all
events are 'dissociated' not by Strife, but
by Love: since the 'elements' are by nature
prior to the Deity, and they too are Deities.)
Again, his account of motion is vague. For
it is not an adequate explanation to say
that 'Love and Strife set things moving,
unless the very nature of Love is a movement
of this kind and the very nature of Strife
a movement of that kind. He ought, then,
either to have defined or to have postulated
these characteristic movements, or to have
demonstrated them-whether strictly or laxly
or in some other fashion. Moreover, since
(a) the 'simple' bodies appear to move 'naturally'
as well as by compulsion, i.e. in a manner
contrary to nature (fire, e.g. appears to
move upwards without compulsion, though it
appears to move by compulsion downwards);
and since (b) what is 'natural' is contrary
to that which is due to compulsion, and movement
by compulsion actually occurs; it follows
that 'natural movement' can also occur in
fact. Is this, then, the movement that Love
sets going? No: for, on the contrary, the
'natural movement' moves Earth downwards
and resembles 'dissociation', and Strife
rather than Love is its cause-so that in
general, too, Love rather than Strife would
seem to be contrary to nature. And unless
Love or Strife is actually setting them in
motion, the 'simple' bodies themselves have
absolutely no movement or rest. But this
is paradoxical: and what is more, they do
in fact obviously move. For though Strife
'dissociated', it was not by Strife that
the 'Ether' was borne upwards. On the contrary,
sometimes he attributes its movement to something
like chance ('For thus, as it ran, it happened
to meet them then, though often otherwise"),
while at other times he says it is the nature
of Fire to be borne upwards, but 'the Ether'
(to quote his words) 'sank down upon the
Earth with long roots'. With such statements,
too, he combines the assertion that the Order
of the World is the same now, in the reign
of Strife, as it was formerly in the reign
of Love. What, then, is the 'first mover'
of the 'elements'? What causes their motion?
Presumably not Love and Strife: on the contrary,
these are causes of a particular motion,
if at least we assume that 'first mover'
to be an originative source'.
An additional paradox is that the soul should
consist of the 'elements', or that it should
be one of them. How are the soul's 'alterations'
to take Place? How, e.g. is the change from
being musical to being unmusical, or how
is memory or forgetting, to occur? For clearly,
if the soul be Fire, only such modifications
will happen to it as characterize Fire qua
Fire: while if it be compounded out of the
elements', only the corporeal modifications
will occur in it. But the changes we have
mentioned are none of them corporeal.
Part 7
The discussion of these difficulties, however,
is a task appropriate to a different investigation:'
let us return to the 'elements' of which
bodies are composed. The theories that 'there
is something common to all the "elements"',
and that they are reciprocally transformed',
are so related that those who accept either
are bound to accept the other as well. Those,
on the other hand, who do not make their
coming-to-be reciprocal-who refuse to suppose
that any one of the 'elements' comes-to-be
out of any other taken singly, except in
the sense in which bricks come-to-be out
of a wall-are faced with a paradox. How,
on their theory, are flesh and bones or any
of the other compounds to result from the
'elements' taken together?
Indeed, the point we have raised constitutes
a problem even for those who generate the
'elements' out of one another. In what manner
does anything other than, and beside, the
'elements' come-to-be out of them? Let me
illustrate my meaning. Water can come-to-be
out of Fire and Fire out of Water; for their
substralum is something common to them both.
But flesh too, presumably, and marrow come-to-be
out of them. How, then, do such things come
to-be? For (a) how is the manner of their
coming-to-be to be conceived by those who
maintain a theory like that of Empedocles?
They must conceive it as composition-just
as a wall comes-to-be out of bricks and stones:
and the 'Mixture', of which they speak, will
be composed of the 'elements', these being
preserved in it unaltered but with their
small particles juxtaposed each to each.
That will be the manner, presumably, in which
flesh and every other compound results from
the 'elements'. Consequently, it follows
that Fire and Water do not come-to-be 'out
of any and every part of flesh'. For instance,
although a sphere might come-to-be out of
this part of a lump of wax and a pyramid
out of some other part, it was nevertheless
possible for either figure to have come-to-be
out of either part indifferently: that is
the manner of coming-to-be when 'both Fire
and Water come-to-be out of any and every
part of flesh'. Those, however, who maintain
the theory in question, are not at liberty
to conceive that 'both come-to-be out of
flesh' in that manner, but only as a stone
and a brick 'both come-to-be out of a wall'-viz.
each out of a different place or part. Similarly
(b) even for those who postulate a single
matter of their 'elements' there is a certain
difficulty in explaining how anything is
to result from two of them taken together-e.g.
from 'cold' and hot', or from Fire and Earth.
For if flesh consists of both and is neither
of them, nor again is a 'composition' of
them in which they are preserved unaltered,
what alternative is left except to identify
the resultant of the two 'elements' with
their matter? For the passingaway of either
'element' produces either the other or the
matter.
Perhaps we may suggest the following solution.
(i) There are differences of degree in hot
and cold. Although, therefore, when either
is fully real without qualification, the
other will exist potentially; yet, when neither
exists in the full completeness of its being,
but both by combining destroy one another's
excesses so that there exist instead a hot
which (for a 'hot') is cold and a cold which
(for a 'cold') is hot; then what results
from these two contraries will be neither
their matter, nor either of them existing
in its full reality without qualification.
There will result instead an 'intermediate':
and this 'intermediate', according as it
is potentially more hot than cold or vice
versa, will possess a power-of-heating that
is double or triple its power-of-cooling,
or otherwise related thereto in some similar
ratio. Thus all the other bodies will result
from the contraries, or rather from the 'elements',
in so far as these have been 'combined':
while the elements' will result from the
contraries, in so far as these 'exist potentially'
in a special sense-not as matter 'exists
potentially', but in the sense explained
above. And when a thing comes-to-be in this
manner, the process is cobination'; whereas
what comes-to-be in the other manner is matter.
Moreover (ii) contraries also 'suffer action',
in accordance with the disjunctively-articulated
definition established in the early part
of this work.' For the actually-hot is potentially-cold
and the actually cold potentially-hot; so
that hot and cold, unless they are equally
balanced, are transformed into one another
(and all the other contraries behave in a
similar way). It is thus, then, that in the
first place the 'elements' are transformed;
and that (in the second place) out of the
'elements' there come-to-be flesh and bones
and the like-the hot becoming cold and the
cold becoming hot when they have been brought
to the 'mean'. For at the 'mean' is neither
hot nor cold. The 'mean', however, is of
considerable extent and not indivisible.
Similarly, it is qua reduced to a 'mean'
condition that the dry and the moist, as
well as the contraries we have used as examples,
produce flesh and bone and the remaining
compounds.
Part 8
All the compound bodies-all of which exist
in the region belonging to the central body-are
composed of all the 'simple' bodies. For
they all contain Earth because every 'simple'
body is to be found specially and most abundantly
in its own place. And they all contain Water
because (a) the compound must possess a definite
outline and Water, alone of the 'simple'
bodies, is readily adaptable in shape: moreover
(b) Earth has no power of cohesion without
the moist. On the contrary, the moist is
what holds it together; for it would fall
to pieces if the moist were eliminated from
it completely.
They contain Earth and Water, then, for the
reasons we have given: and they contain Air
and Fire, because these are contrary to Earth
and Water (Earth being contrary to Air and
Water to Fire, in so far as one Substance
can be 'contrary' to another). Now all compounds
presuppose in their coming-to-be constituents
which are contrary to one another: and in
all compounds there is contained one set
of the contrasted extremes. Hence the other
set must be contained in them also, so that
every compound will include all the 'simple'
bodies.
Additional evidence seems to be furnished
by the food each compound takes. For all
of them are fed by substances which are the
same as their constituents, and all of them
are fed by more substances than one. Indeed,
even the plants, though it might be thought
they are fed by one substance only, viz.
by Water, are fed by more than one: for Earth
has been mixed with the Water. That is why
farmers too endeavour to mix before watering.
Although food is akin to the matter, that
which is fed is the 'figure'-i.e. the 'form'
taken along with the matter. This fact enables
us to understand why, whereas all the 'simple'
bodies come-to-be out of one another, Fire
is the only one of them which (as our predecessors
also assert) 'is fed'. For Fire alone-or
more than all the rest-is akin to the 'form'
because it tends by nature to be borne towards
the limit. Now each of them naturally tends
to be borne towards its own place; but the
'figure'-i.e. the 'form'-Of them all is at
the limits.
Thus we have explained that all the compound
bodies are composed of all the 'simple' bodies.
Part 9
Since some things are such as to come-to-be
and pass-away, and since coming-to-be in
fact occurs in the region about the centre,
we must explain the number and the nature
of the 'originative sources' of all coming-to-be
alike: for a grasp of the true theory of
any universal facilitates the understanding
of its specific forms.
The 'originative sources', then, of the things
which come-to-be are equal in number to,
and identical in kind with, those in the
sphere of the eternal and primary things.
For there is one in the sense of 'matter',
and a second in the sense of 'form': and,
in addition, the third 'originative source'
must be present as well. For the two first
are not sufficient to bring things into being,
any more than they are adequate to account
for the primary things.
Now cause, in the sense of material origin,
for the things which are such as to come-to-be
is 'that which can be-and-not-be': and this
is identical with'that which can come-to-be-and-pass-away',
since the latter, while it is at one time,
at another time is not. (For whereas some
things are of necessity, viz. the eternal
things, others of necessity are not. And
of these two sets of things, since they cannot
diverge from the necessity of their nature,
it is impossible for the first not to he
and impossible for the second to he. Other
things, however, can both be and not he.)
Hence coming-to-be and passing-away must
occur within the field of 'that which can
be-and not-be'. This, therefore, is cause
in the sense of material origin for the things
which are such as to come-to-be; while cause,
in the sense of their 'end', is their 'figure'
or 'form'-and that is the formula expressing
the essential nature of each of them.
But the third 'originative source' must be
present as well-the cause vaguely dreamed
of by all our predecessors, definitely stated
by none of them. On the contrary (a) some
amongst them thought the nature of 'the Forms'
was adequate to account for coming-to-be.
Thus Socrates in the Phaedo first blames
everybody else for having given no explanation;
and then lays it down; that 'some things
are Forms, others Participants in the Forms',
and that 'while a thing is said to "be"
in virtue of the Form, it is said to "come-to-be"
qua sharing in," to "pass-away"
qua "losing," the 'Form'. Hence
he thinks that 'assuming the truth of these
theses, the Forms must be causes both of
coming-to-be and of passing-away'. On the
other hand (b) there were others who thought
'the matter' was adequate by itself to account
for coming-to-be, since 'the movement originates
from the matter'.
Neither of these theories, however, is sound.
For (a) if the Forms are causes, why is their
generating activity intermittent instead
of perpetual and continuous-since there always
are Participants as well as Forms? Besides,
in some instances we see that the cause is
other than the Form. For it is the doctor
who implants health and the man of science
who implants science, although 'Health itself'
and 'Science itself' are as well as the Participants:
and the same principle applies to everything
else that is produced in accordance with
an art. On the other hand (b) to say that
'matter generates owing to its movement'
would be, no doubt, more scientific than
to make such statements as are made by the
thinkers we have been criticizing. For what
'alters' and transfigures plays a greater
part in bringing, things into being; and
we are everywhere accustomed, in the products
of nature and of art alike, to look upon
that which can initiate movement as the producing
cause. Nevertheless this second theory is
not right either.
For, to begin with, it is characteristic
of matter to suffer action, i.e. to be moved:
but to move, i.e. to act, belongs to a different
'power'. This is obvious both in the things
that come-to-be by art and in those that
come to-be by nature. Water does not of itself
produce out of itself an animal: and it is
the art, not the wood, that makes a bed.
Nor is this their only error. They make a
second mistake in omitting the more controlling
cause: for they eliminate the essential nature,
i.e. the 'form'. And what is more, since
they remove the formal cause, they invest
the forces they assign to the 'simple' bodies-the
forces which enable these bodies to bring
things into being-with too instrumental a
character. For 'since' (as they say) 'it
is the nature of the hot to dissociate, of
the cold to bring together, and of each remaining
contrary either to act or to suffer action',
it is out of such materials and by their
agency (so they maintain) that everything
else comes-to-be and passes-away. Yet (a)
it is evident that even Fire is itself moved,
i.e. suffers action. Moreover (b) their procedure
is virtually the same as if one were to treat
the saw (and the various instruments of carpentry)
as 'the cause' of the things that come-to-be:
for the wood must be divided if a man saws,
must become smooth if he planes, and so on
with the remaining tools. Hence, however
true it may be that Fire is active, i.e.
sets things moving, there is a further point
they fail to observe-viz. that Fire is inferior
to the tools or instruments in the manner
in which it sets things moving.
Part 10
As to our own theory-we have given a general
account of the causes in an earlier work,'
we have now explained and distinguished the
'matter' and the 'form'. Further, since the
change which is motion has been proved' to
be eternal, the continuity of the occurrence
of coming-to-be follows necessarily from
what we have established: for the eternal
motion, by causing 'the generator' to approach
and retire, will produce coming-to-be uninterruptedly.
At the same time it is clear that we were
right when, in an earlier work,' we called
motion (not coming-to-be) 'the primary form
of change'. For it is far more reasonable
that what is should cause the coming-to-be
of what is not, than that what is not should
cause the being of what is. Now that which
is being moved is, but that which is coming-to-be
is not: hence, also, motion is prior to coming-to-be.
We have assumed, and have proved, that coming-to-be
and passing-away happen to things continuously;
and we assert that motion causes coming-to-be.
That being so, it is evident that, if the
motion be single, both processes cannot occur
since they are contrary to one another: for
it is a law of nature that the same cause,
provided it remain in the same condition,
always produces the same effect, so that,
from a single motion, either coming-to-be
or passing-away will always result. The movements
must, on the contrary, be more than one,
and they must be contrasted with one another
either by the sense of their motion or by
its irregularity: for contrary effects demand
contraries as their causes.
This explains why it is not the primary motion
that causes coming-to-be and passingaway,
but the motion along the inclined circle:
for this motion not only possesses the necessary
continuity, but includes a duality of movements
as well. For if coming-to-be and passing-away
are always to be continuous, there must be
some body always being moved (in order that
these changes may not fail) and moved with
a duality of movements (in order that both
changes, not one only, may result). Now the
continuity of this movement is caused by
the motion of the whole: but the approaching
and retreating of the moving body are caused
by the inclination. For the consequence of
the inclination is that the body becomes
alternately remote and near; and since its
distance is thus unequal, its movement will
be irregular. Therefore, if it generates
by approaching and by its proximity, it-this
very same body-destroys by retreating and
becoming remote: and if it generates by many
successive approaches, it also destroys by
many successive retirements. For contrary
effects demand contraries as their causes;
and the natural processes of passing-away
and coming-to-be occupy equal periods of
time. Hence, too, the times-i.e. the lives-of
the several kinds of living things have a
number by which they are distinguished: for
there is an Order controlling all things,
and every time (i.e. every life) is measured
by a period. Not all of them, however, are
measured by the same period, but some by
a smaller and others by a greater one: for
to some of them the period, which is their
measure, is a year, while to some it is longer
and to others shorter.
And there are facts of observation in manifest
agreement with our theories. Thus we see
that coming-to-be occurs as the sun approaches
and decay as it retreats; and we see that
the two processes occupy equal times. For
the durations of the natural processes of
passing-away and coming-to-be are equal.
Nevertheless it Often happens that things
pass-away in too short a time. This is due
to the 'intermingling' by which the things
that come-to-be and pass-away are implicated
with one another. For their matter is 'irregular',
i.e. is not everywhere the same: hence the
processes by which they come-to-be must be
'irregular' too, i.e. some too quick and
others too slow. Consequently the phenomenon
in question occurs, because the 'irregular'
coming-to-be of these things is the passing-away
of other things.
Coming-to-be and passing-away will, as we
have said, always be continuous, and will
never fail owing to the cause we stated.
And this continuity has a sufficient reason
on our theory. For in all things, as we affirm,
Nature always strives after 'the better'.
Now 'being' (we have explained elsewhere
the exact variety of meanings we recognize
in this term) is better than 'not-being':
but not all things can possess 'being', since
they are too far removed from the 'originative
source. 'God therefore adopted the remaining
alternative, and fulfilled the perfection
of the universe by making coming-to-be uninterrupted:
for the greatest possible coherence would
thus be secured to existence, because that
'coming-to-be should itself come-to-be perpetually'
is the closest approximation to eternal being.
The cause of this perpetuity of coming-to-be,
as we have often said, is circular motion:
for that is the only motion which is continuous.
That, too, is why all the other things-the
things, I mean, which are reciprocally transformed
in virtue of their 'passions' and their 'powers
of action' e.g. the 'simple' bodiesimitate
circular motion. For when Water is transformed
into Air, Air into Fire, and the Fire back
into Water, we say the coming-to-be 'has
completed the circle', because it reverts
again to the beginning. Hence it is by imitating
circular motion that rectilinear motion too
is continuous.
These considerations serve at the same time
to explain what is to some people a baffling
problem-viz. why the 'simple' bodies, since
each them is travelling towards its own place,
have not become dissevered from one another
in the infinite lapse of time. The reason
is their reciprocal transformation. For,
had each of them persisted in its own place
instead of being transformed by its neighbour,
they would have got dissevered long ago.
They are transformed, however, owing to the
motion with its dual character: and because
they are transformed, none of them is able
to persist in any place allotted to it by
the Order.
It is clear from what has been said (i) that
coming-to-be and passing-away actually occur,
(ii) what causes them, and (iii) what subject
undergoes them. But (a) if there is to be
movement (as we have explained elsewhere,
in an earlier work') there must be something
which initiates it; if there is to be movement
always, there must always be something which
initiates it; if the movement is to be continuous,
what initiates it must be single, unmoved,
ungenerated, and incapable of 'alteration';
and if the circular movements are more than
one, their initiating causes must all of
them, in spite of their plurality, be in
some way subordinated to a single 'originative
source'. Further (b) since time is continuous,
movement must be continuous, inasmuch as
there can be no time without movement. Time,
therefore, is a 'number' of some continuous
movement-a 'number', therefore, of the circular
movement, as was established in the discussions
at the beginning. But (c) is movement continuous
because of the continuity of that which is
moved, or because that in which the movement
occurs (I mean, e.g. the place or the quality)
is continuous? The answer must clearly be
'because that which is moved is continuous'.
(For how can the quality be continuous except
in virtue of the continuity of the thing
to which it belongs? But if the continuity
of 'that in which' contributes to make the
movement continuous, this is true only of
'the place in which'; for that has 'magnitude'
in a sense.) But (d) amongst continuous bodies
which are moved, only that which is moved
in a circle is 'continuous' in such a way
that it preserves its continuity with itself
throughout the movement. The conclusion therefore
is that this is what produces continuous
movement, viz. the body which is being moved
in a circle; and its movement makes time
continuous.
Part 11
Wherever there is continuity in any process
(coming-to-be or 'alteration' or any kind
of change whatever) we observe consecutiveness',
i.e. this coming-to-be after that without
any interval. Hence we must investigate whether,
amongst the consecutive members, there is
any whose future being is necessary; or whether,
on the contrary, every one of them may fail
to come-to-be. For that some of them may
fail to occur, is clear. (a) We need only
appeal to the distinction between the statements
'x will be' and 'x is about to which depends
upon this fact. For if it be true to say
of x that it 'will be', it must at some time
be true to say of it that 'it is': whereas,
though it be true to say of x now that 'it
is about to occur', it is quite possible
for it not to come-to-be-thus a man might
not walk, though he is now 'about to' walk.
And (b) since (to appeal to a general principle)
amongst the things which 'are' some are capable
also of 'not-being', it is clear that the
same ambiguous character will attach to them
no less when they are coming-to-be: in other
words, their coming-to-be will not be necessary.
Then are all the things that come-to-be of
this contingent character? Or, on the contrary,
is it absolutely necessary for some of them
to come-to-be? Is there, in fact, a distinction
in the field of 'coming-to-be' corresponding
to the distinction, within the field of 'being',
between things that cannot possibly 'not-be'
and things that can 'not-be'? For instance,
is it necessary that solstices shall come-to-be,
i.e. impossible that they should fail to
be able to occur?
Assuming that the antecedent must have come-to-be
if the consequent is to be (e.g. that foundations
must have come-to-be if there is to be a
house: clay, if there are to be foundations),
is the converse also true? If foundations
have come-to-be, must a house come-to-be?
The answer seems to be that the necessary
nexus no longer holds, unless it is 'necessary'
for the consequent (as well as for the antecedent)
to come-to-be-'necessary' absolutely. If
that be the case, however, 'a house must
come to-be if foundations have come-to-be',
as well as vice versa. For the antecedent
was assumed to be so related to the consequent
that, if the latter is to be, the antecedent
must have come-tobe before it. If, therefore,
it is necessary that the consequent should
come-to-be, the antecedent also must have
come-to-be: and if the antecedent has come-to-be,
then the consequent also must come-to-be-not,
however, because of the antecedent, but because
the future being of the consequent was assumed
as necessary. Hence, in any sequence, when
the being of the consequent is necessary,
the nexus is reciprocal-in other words, when
the antecedent has come-to-be the consequent
must always come-to-be too.
Now (i) if the sequence of occurrences is
to proceed ad infinitum 'downwards', the
coming to-be of any determinate 'this' amongst
the later members of the sequence will not
be absolutely, but only conditionally, necessary.
For it will always be necessary that some
other member shall have come-to-be before
'this' as the presupposed condition of the
necessity that 'this' should come-to-be:
consequently, since what is 'infinite' has
no 'originative source', neither will there
be in the infinite sequence any 'primary'
member which will make it 'necessary' for
the remaining members to come-to-be.
Nor again (ii) will it be possible to say
with truth, even in regard to the members
of a limited sequence, that it is 'absolutely
necessary' for any one of them to come-to-be.
We cannot truly say, e.g. that 'it is absolutely
necessary for a house to come-to-be when
foundations have been laid': for (unless
it is always necessary for a house to be
coming-to-be) we should be faced with the
consequence that, when foundations have been
laid, a thing, which need not always be,
must always be. No: if its coming-to-be is
to be 'necessary', it must be 'always' in
its coming-to-be. For what is 'of necessity'
coincides with what is 'always', since that
which 'must be' cannot possibly 'not-be'.
Hence a thing is eternal if its 'being' is
necessary: and if it is eternal, its 'being'
is necessary. And if, therefore, the 'coming-to-be'
of a thing is necessary, its 'coming-to-be'
is eternal; and if eternal, necessary.
It follows that the coming-to-be of anything,
if it is absolutely necessary, must be cyclical-i.e.
must return upon itself. For coming to-be
must either be limited or not limited: and
if not limited, it must be either rectilinear
or cyclical. But the first of these last
two alternatives is impossible if coming-to-be
is to be eternal, because there could not
be any 'originative source' whatever in an
infinite rectilinear sequence, whether its
members be taken 'downwards' (as future events)
or 'upwards' (as past events). Yet coming-to-be
must have an 'originative source' (if it
is to be necessary and therefore eternal),
nor can it be eternal if it is limited. Consequently
it must be cyclical. Hence the nexus must
be reciprocal. By this I mean that the necessary
occurrence of 'this' involves the necessary
occurrence of its antecedent: and conversely
that, given the antecedent, it is also necessary
for the consequent to come-to-be. And this
reciprocal nexus will hold continuously throughout
the sequence: for it makes no difference
whether the reciprocal nexus, of which we
are speaking, is mediated by two, or by many,
members.
It is in circular movement, therefore, and
in cyclical coming-to-be that the 'absolutely
necessary' is to be found. In other words,
if the coming-to-be of any things is cyclical,
it is 'necessary' that each of them is coming-to-be
and has come-to-be: and if the coming-to-be
of any things is 'necessary', their coming-to-be
is cyclical.
The result we have reached is logically concordant
with the eternity of circular motion, i.e.
the eternity of the revolution of the heavens
(a fact which approved itself on other and
independent evidence),' since precisely those
movements which belong to, and depend upon,
this eternal revolution 'come-to-be' of necessity,
and of necessity 'will be'. For since the
revolving body is always setting something
else in motion, the movement of the things
it moves must also be circular. Thus, from
the being of the 'upper revolution' it follows
that the sun revolves in this determinate
manner; and since the sun revolves thus,
the seasons in consequence come-to-be in
a cycle, i.e. return upon themselves; and
since they come-to-be cyclically, so in their
turn do the things whose coming-to-be the
seasons initiate.
Then why do some things manifestly come to-be
in this cyclical fashion (as, e.g. showers
and air, so that it must rain if there is
to be a cloud and, conversely, there must
be a cloud if it is to rain), while men and
animals do not 'return upon themselves' so
that the same individual comes-to-be a second
time (for though your coming-to-be presupposes
your father's, his coming-to-be does not
presuppose yours)? Why, on the contrary,
does this coming-to-be seem to constitute
a rectilinear sequence?
In discussing this new problem, we must begin
by inquiring whether all things 'return upon
themselves' in a uniform manner; or whether,
on the contrary, though in some sequences
what recurs is numerically the same, in other
sequences it is the same only in species.
In consequence of this distinction, it is
evident that those things, whose 'substance'-that
which is undergoing the process-is imperishable,
will be numerically, as well as specifically,
the same in their recurrence: for the character
of the process is determined by the character
of that which undergoes it. Those things,
on the other hand, whose 'substance' is perish,
able (not imperishable) must 'return upon
themselves' in the sense that what recurs,
though specifically the same, is not the
same numerically. That why, when Water comes-to-be
from Air and Air from Water, the Air is the
same 'specifically', not 'numerically': and
if these too recur numerically the same,
at any rate this does not happen with things
whose 'substance' comes-to-be-whose 'substance'
is such that it is essentially capable of
not-being.
THE END
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