
ON THE MOTION OF ANIMALS
350 BC
Translated by A. S. L. Farquharson
ARISTOTLE
384 BC - 322 BC
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Part 1
Elsewhere we have investigated in detail
the movement of animals after their various
kinds, the differences between them, and
the reasons for their particular characters
(for some animals fly, some swim, some walk,
others move in various other ways); there
remains an investigation of the common ground
of any sort of animal movement whatsoever.
Now we have already determined (when we were
discussing whether eternal motion exists
or not, and its definition, if it does exist)
that the origin of all other motions is that
which moves itself, and that the origin of
this is the immovable, and that the prime
mover must of necessity be immovable. And
we must grasp this not only generally in
theory, but also by reference to individuals
in the world of sense, for with these in
view we seek general theories, and with these
we believe that general theories ought to
harmonize. Now in the world of sense too
it is plainly impossible for movement to
be initiated if there is nothing at rest,
and before all else in our present subject-
animal life. For if one of the parts of an
animal be moved, another must be at rest,
and this is the purpose of their joints;
animals use joints like a centre, and the
whole member, in which the joint is, becomes
both one and two, both straight and bent,
changing potentially and actually by reason
of the joint. And when it is bending and
being moved one of the points in the joint
is moved and one is at rest, just as if the
points A and D of a diameter were at rest,
and B were moved, and DAC were generated.
However, in the geometrical illustration,
the centre is held to be altogether indivisible
(for in mathematics motion is a fiction,
as the phrase goes, no mathematical entity
being really moved), whereas in the case
of joints the centres become now one potentially
and divided actually, and now one actually
and divided potentially. But still the origin
of movement, qua origin, always remains at
rest when the lower part of a limb is moved;
for example, the elbow joint, when the forearm
is moved, and the shoulder, when the whole
arm; the knee when the tibia is moved, and
the hip when the whole leg. Accordingly it
is plain that each animal as a whole must
have within itself a point at rest, whence
will be the origin of that which is moved,
and supporting itself upon which it will
be moved both as a complete whole and in
its members.
Part 2
But the point of rest in the animal is still
quite ineffectual unless there be something
without which is absolutely at rest and immovable.
Now it is worth while to pause and consider
what has been said, for it involves a speculation
which extends beyond animals even to the
motion and march of the universe. For just
as there must be something immovable within
the animal, if it is to be moved, so even
more must there be without it something immovable,
by supporting itself upon which that which
is moved moves. For were that something always
to give way (as it does for mice walking
in grain or persons walking in sand) advance
would be impossible, and neither would there
be any walking unless the ground were to
remain still, nor any flying or swimming
were not the air and the sea to resist. And
this which resists must needs be different
from what is moved, the whole of it from
the whole of that, and what is thus immovable
must be no part of what is moved; otherwise
there will be no movement. Evidence of this
lies in the problem why it is that a man
easily moves a boat from outside, if he push
with a pole, putting it against the mast
or some other part, but if he tried to do
this when in the boat itself he would never
move it, no not giant Tityus himself nor
Boreas blowing from inside the ship, if he
really were blowing in the way painters represent
him; for they paint him sending the breath
out from the boat. For whether one blew gently
or so stoutly as to make a very great wind,
and whether what were thrown or pushed were
wind or something else, it is necessary in
the first place to be supported upon one
of one's own members which is at rest and
so to push, and in the second place for this
member, either itself, or that of which it
is a part, to remain at rest, fixing itself
against something external to itself. Now
the man who is himself in the boat, if he
pushes, fixing himself against the boat,
very naturally does not move the boat, because
what he pushes against should properly remain
at rest. Now what he is trying to move, and
what he is fixing himself against is in his
case the same. If, however, he pushes or
pulls from outside he does move it, for the
ground is no part of the boat.
Part 3
Here we may ask the difficult question whether
if something moves the whole heavens this
mover must be immovable, and moreover be
no part of the heavens, nor in the heavens.
For either it is moved itself and moves the
heavens, in which case it must touch something
immovable in order to create movement, and
then this is no part of that which creates
movement; or if the mover is from the first
immovable it will equally be no part of that
which is moved. In this point at least they
argue correctly who say that as the Sphere
is carried round in a circle no single part
remains still, for then either the whole
would necessarily stand still or its continuity
be torn asunder; but they argue less well
in supposing that the poles have a certain
force, though conceived as having no magnitude,
but as merely termini or points. For besides
the fact that no such things have any substantial
existence it is impossible for a single movement
to be initiated by what is twofold; and yet
they make the poles two. From a review of
these difficulties we may conclude that there
is something so related to the whole of Nature,
as the earth is to animals and things moved
by them.
And the mythologists with their fable of
Atlas setting his feet upon the earth appear
to have based the fable upon intelligent
grounds. They make Atlas a kind of diameter
twirling the heavens about the poles. Now
as the earth remains still this would be
reasonable enough, but their theory involves
them in the position that the earth is no
part of the universe. And further the force
of that which initiates movement must be
made equal to the force of that which remains
at rest. For there is a definite quantity
of force or power by dint of which that which
remains at rest does so, just as there is
of force by dint of which that which initiates
movement does so; and as there is a necessary
proportion between opposite motions, so there
is between absences of motion. Now equal
forces are unaffected by one another, but
are overcome by a superiority of force. And
so in their theory Atlas, or whatever similar
power initiates movement from within, must
exert no more force than will exactly balance
the stability of the earth- otherwise the
earth will be moved out of her place in the
centre of things. For as the pusher pushes
so is the pushed pushed, and with equal force.
But the prime mover moves that which is to
begin with at rest, so that the power it
exerts is greater, rather than equal and
like to the power which produces absence
of motion in that which is moved. And similarly
also the power of what is moved and so moves
must be greater than the power of that which
is moved but does not initiate movement.
Therefore the force of the earth in its immobility
will have to be as great as the force of
the whole heavens, and of that which moves
the heavens. But if that is impossible, it
follows that the heavens cannot possibly
be moved by any force of this kind inside
them.
Part 4
There is a further difficulty about the motions
of the parts of the heavens which, as akin
to what has gone before, may be considered
next. For if one could overcome by force
of motion the immobility of the earth he
would clearly move it away from the centre.
And it is plain that the power from which
this force would originate will not be infinite,
for the earth is not infinite and therefore
its weight is not. Now there are more senses
than one of the word 'impossible'. When we
say it is impossible to see a sound, and
when we say it is impossible to see the men
in the moon, we use two senses of the word;
the former is of necessity, the latter, though
their nature is to be seen, cannot as a fact
be seen by us. Now we suppose that the heavens
are of necessity impossible to destroy and
to dissolve, whereas the result of the present
argument would be to do away with this necessity.
For it is natural and possible for a motion
to exist greater than the force by dint of
which the earth is at rest, or than that
by dint of which Fire and Aether are moved.
If then there are superior motions, these
will be dissolved in succession by one another:
and if there actually are not, but might
possibly be (for the earth cannot be infinite
because no body can possibly be infinite),
there is a possibility of the heavens being
dissolved. For what is to prevent this coming
to pass, unless it be impossible? And it
is not impossible unless the opposite is
necessary. This difficulty, however, we will
discuss elsewhere.
To resume, must there be something immovable
and at rest outside of what is moved, and
no part of it, or not? And must this necessarily
be so also in the case of the universe? Perhaps
it would be thought strange were the origin
of movement inside. And to those who so conceive
it the word of Homer would appear to have
been well spoken:
'Nay, ye would not pull Zeus, highest of
all from heaven to the plain, no not even
if ye toiled right hard; come, all ye gods
and goddesses! Set hands to the chain'; for
that which is entirely immovable cannot possibly
be moved by anything. And herein lies the
solution of the difficulty stated some time
back, the possibility or impossibility of
dissolving the system of the heavens, in
that it depends from an original which is
immovable.
Now in the animal world there must be not
only an immovable without, but also within
those things which move in place, and initiate
their own movement. For one part of an animal
must be moved, and another be at rest, and
against this the part which is moved will
support itself and be moved; for example,
if it move one of its parts; for one part,
as it were, supports itself against another
part at rest.
But about things without life which are moved
one might ask the question whether all contain
in themselves both that which is at rest
and that which initiates movement, and whether
they also, for instance fire, earth, or any
other inanimate thing, must support themselves
against something outside which is at rest.
Or is this impossible and must it not be
looked for rather in those primary causes
by which they are set in motion? For all
things without life are moved by something
other, and the origin of all things so moved
are things which move themselves. And out
of these we have spoken about animals (for
they must all have in themselves that which
is at rest, and without them that against
which they are supported); but whether there
is some higher and prime mover is not clear,
and an origin of that kind involves a different
discussion. Animals at any rate which move
themselves are all moved supporting themselves
on what is outside them, even when they inspire
and expire; for there is no essential difference
between casting a great and a small weight,
and this is what men do when they spit and
cough and when they breathe in and breathe
out.
Part 5
But is it only in that which moves itself
in place that there must be a point at rest,
or does this hold also of that which causes
its own qualitative changes, and its own
growth? Now the question of original generation
and decay is different; for if there is,
as we hold, a primary movement, this would
be the cause of generation and decay, and
probably of all the secondary movements too.
And as in the universe, so in the animal
world this is the primary movement, when
the creature attains maturity; and therefore
it is the cause of growth, when the creature
becomes the cause of its own growth, and
the cause too of alteration. But if this
is not the primary movement then the point
at rest is not necessary. However, the earliest
growth and alteration in the living creature
arise through another and by other channels,
nor can anything possibly be the cause of
its own generation and decay, for the mover
must exist before the moved, the begetter
before the begotten, and nothing is prior
to itself.
Part 6
Now whether the soul is moved or not, and
how it is moved if it be moved, has been
stated before in our treatise concerning
it. And since all inorganic things are moved
by some other thing- and the manner of the
movement of the first and eternally moved,
and how the first mover moves it, has been
determined before in our Metaphysics, it
remains to inquire how the soul moves the
body, and what is the origin of movement
in a living creature. For, if we except the
movement of the universe, things with life
are the causes of the movement of all else,
that is of all that are not moved by one
another by mutual impact. And so all their
motions have a term or limit, inasmuch as
the movements of things with life have such.
For all living things both move and are moved
with some object, so that this is the term
of all their movement, the end, that is,
in view. Now we see that the living creature
is moved by intellect, imagination, purpose,
wish, and appetite. And all these are reducible
to mind and desire. For both imagination
and sensation are on common ground with mind,
since all three are faculties of judgement
though differing according to distinctions
stated elsewhere. Will, however, impulse,
and appetite, are all three forms of desire,
while purpose belongs both to intellect and
to desire. Therefore the object of desire
or of intellect first initiates movement,
not, that is, every object of intellect,
only the end in the domain of conduct. Accordingly
among goods that which moves is a practical
end, not the good in its whole extent. For
it initiates movement only so far as something
else is for its sake, or so far as it is
the object of that which is for the sake
of something else. And we must suppose that
a seeming good may take the room of actual
good, and so may the pleasant, which is itself
a seeming good. From these considerations
it is clear that in one regard that which
is eternally moved by the eternal mover is
moved in the same way as every living creature,
in another regard differently, and so while
it is moved eternally, the movement of living
creatures has a term. Now the eternal beautiful,
and the truly and primarily good (which is
not at one time good, at another time not
good), is too divine and precious to be relative
to anything else. The prime mover then moves,
itself being unmoved, whereas desire and
its faculty are moved and so move. But it
is not necessary for the last in the chain
of things moved to move something else; wherefore
it is plainly reasonable that motion in place
should be the last of what happens in the
region of things happening, since the living
creature is moved and goes forward by reason
of desire or purpose, when some alteration
has been set going on the occasion of sensation
or imagination.
Part 7
But how is it that thought (viz. sense, imagination,
and thought proper) is sometimes followed
by action, sometimes not; sometimes by movement,
sometimes not? What happens seems parallel
to the case of thinking and inferring about
the immovable objects of science. There the
end is the truth seen (for, when one conceives
the two premisses, one at once conceives
and comprehends the conclusion), but here
the two premisses result in a conclusion
which is an action- for example, one conceives
that every man ought to walk, one is a man
oneself: straightway one walks; or that,
in this case, no man should walk, one is
a man: straightway one remains at rest. And
one so acts in the two cases provided that
there is nothing in the one case to compel
or in the other to prevent. Again, I ought
to create a good, a house is good: straightway
I make a house. I need a covering, a coat
is a covering: I need a coat. What I need
I ought to make, I need a coat: I make a
coat. And the conclusion I must make a coat
is an action. And the action goes back to
the beginning or first step. If there is
to be a coat, one must first have B, and
if B then A, so one gets A to begin with.
Now that the action is the conclusion is
clear. But the premisses of action are of
two kinds, of the good and of the possible.
And as in some cases of speculative inquiry
we suppress one premise so here the mind
does not stop to consider at all an obvious
minor premise; for example if walking is
good for man, one does not dwell upon the
minor 'I am a man'. And so what we do without
reflection, we do quickly. For when a man
actualizes himself in relation to his object
either by perceiving, or imagining or conceiving
it, what he desires he does at once. For
the actualizing of desire is a substitute
for inquiry or reflection. I want to drink,
says appetite; this is drink, says sense
or imagination or mind: straightway I drink.
In this way living creatures are impelled
to move and to act, and desire is the last
or immediate cause of movement, and desire
arises after perception or after imagination
and conception. And things that desire to
act now create and now act under the influence
of appetite or impulse or of desire or wish.
The movements of animals may be compared
with those of automatic puppets, which are
set going on the occasion of a tiny movement;
the levers are released, and strike the twisted
strings against one another; or with the
toy wagon. For the child mounts on it and
moves it straight forward, and then again
it is moved in a circle owing to its wheels
being of unequal diameter (the smaller acts
like a centre on the same principle as the
cylinders). Animals have parts of a similar
kind, their organs, the sinewy tendons to
wit and the bones; the bones are like the
wooden levers in the automaton, and the iron;
the tendons are like the strings, for when
these are tightened or leased movement begins.
However, in the automata and the toy wagon
there is no change of quality, though if
the inner wheels became smaller and greater
by turns there would be the same circular
movement set up. In an animal the same part
has the power of becoming now larger and
now smaller, and changing its form, as the
parts increase by warmth and again contract
by cold and change their quality. This change
of quality is caused by imaginations and
sensations and by ideas. Sensations are obviously
a form of change of quality, and imagination
and conception have the same effect as the
objects so imagined and conceived For in
a measure the form conceived be it of hot
or cold or pleasant or fearful is like what
the actual objects would be, and so we shudder
and are frightened at a mere idea. Now all
these affections involve changes of quality,
and with those changes some parts of the
body enlarge, others grow smaller. And it
is not hard to see that a small change occurring
at the centre makes great and numerous changes
at the circumference, just as by shifting
the rudder a hair's breadth you get a wide
deviation at the prow. And further, when
by reason of heat or cold or some kindred
affection a change is set up in the region
of the heart, even in an imperceptibly small
part of the heart, it produces a vast difference
in the periphery of the body,- blushing,
let us say, or turning white, goose-skin
and shivers and their opposites.
Part 8
But to return, the object we pursue or avoid
in the field of action is, as has been explained,
the original of movement, and upon the conception
and imagination of this there necessarily
follows a change in the temperature of the
body. For what is painful we avoid, what
is pleasing we pursue. We are, however, unconscious
of what happens in the minute parts; still
anything painful or pleasing is generally
speaking accompanied by a definite change
of temperature in the body. One may see this
by considering the affections. Blind courage
and panic fears, erotic motions, and the
rest of the corporeal affections, pleasant
and painful, are all accompanied by a change
of temperature, some in a particular member,
others in the body generally. So, memories
and anticipations, using as it were the reflected
images of these pleasures and pains, are
now more and now less causes of the same
changes of temperature. And so we see the
reason of nature's handiwork in the inward
parts, and in the centres of movement of
the organic members; they change from solid
to moist, and from moist to solid, from soft
to hard and vice versa. And so when these
are affected in this way, and when besides
the passive and active have the constitution
we have many times described, as often as
it comes to pass that one is active and the
other passive, and neither of them falls
short of the elements of its essence, straightway
one acts and the other responds. And on this
account thinking that one ought to go and
going are virtually simultaneous, unless
there be something else to hinder action.
The organic parts are suitably prepared by
the affections, these again by desire, and
desire by imagination. Imagination in its
turn depends either upon conception or sense-perception.
And the simultaneity and speed are due to
the natural correspondence of the active
and passive.
However, that which first moves the animal
organism must be situate in a definite original.
Now we have said that a joint is the beginning
of one part of a limb, the end of another.
And so nature employs it sometimes as one,
sometimes as two. When movement arises from
a joint, one of the extreme points must remain
at rest, and the other be moved (for as we
explained above the mover must support itself
against a point at rest); accordingly, in
the case of the elbow-joint, the last point
of the forearm is moved but does not move
anything, while, in the flexion, one point
of the elbow, which lies in the whole forearm
that is being moved, is moved, but there
must also be a point which is unmoved, and
this is our meaning when we speak of a point
which is in potency one, but which becomes
two in actual exercise. Now if the arm were
the living animal, somewhere in its elbow-joint
would be situate the original seat of the
moving soul. Since, however, it is possible
for a lifeless thing to be so related to
the hand as the forearm is to the upper (for
example, when a man moves a stick in his
hand), it is evident that the soul, the original
of movement, could not lie in either of the
two extreme points, neither, that is, in
the last point of the stick which is moved,
nor in the original point which causes movement.
For the stick too has an end point and an
originative point by reference to the hand.
Accordingly, this example shows that the
moving original which derives from the soul
is not in the stick and if not, then not
in the hand; for a precisely similar relation
obtains between the hand and the wrist, as
between the wrist and the elbow. In this
matter it makes no difference whether the
part is a continuous part of the body or
not; the stick may be looked at as a detached
part of the whole. It follows then of necessity
that the original cannot lie in any individual
origin which is the end of another member,
even though there may lie another part outside
the one in question. For example, relatively
to the end point of the stick the hand is
the original, but the original of the hand's
movement is in the wrist. And so if the true
original is not in the hand, be-there is
still something higher up, neither is the
true original in the wrist, for once more
if the elbow is at rest the whole part below
it can be moved as a continuous whole.
Part 9
Now since the left and the right sides are
symmetrical, and these opposites are moved
simultaneously, it cannot be that the left
is moved by the right remaining stationary,
nor vice versa; the original must always
be in what lies above both. Therefore, the
original seat of the moving soul must be
in that which lies in the middle, for of
both extremes the middle is the limiting
point; and this is similarly related to the
movements from above [and below,] those that
is from the head, and to the bones which
spring from the spinal column, in creatures
that have a spinal column.
And this is a reasonable arrangement. For
the sensorium is in our opinion in the centre
too; and so, if the region of the original
of movement is altered in structure through
sense-perception and thus changes, it carries
with it the parts that depend upon it and
they too are extended or contracted, and
in this way the movement of the creature
necessarily follows. And the middle of the
body must needs be in potency one but in
action more than one; for the limbs are moved
simultaneously from the original seat of
movement, and when one is at rest the other
is moved. For example, in the line BAC, B
is moved, and A is the mover. There must,
however, be a point at rest if one is to
move, the other to be moved. A (AE) then
being one in potency must be two in action,
and so be a definite spatial magnitude not
a mathematical point. Again, C may be moved
simultaneously with B. Both the originals
then in A must move and be, and so there
must be something other than them which moves
but is not moved. For otherwise, when the
movement begins, the extremes, i. e. the
originals, in A would rest upon one another,
like two men putting themselves back to back
and so moving their legs. There must then
be some one thing which moves both. This
something is the soul, distinct from the
spatial magnitude just described and yet
located therein.
Part 10
Although from the point of view of the definition
of movement- a definition which gives the
cause- desire is the middle term or cause,
and desire moves being moved, still in the
material animated body there must be some
material which itself moves being moved.
Now that which is moved, but whose nature
is not to initiate movement, is capable of
being passive to an external force, while
that which initiates movement must needs
possess a kind of force and power. Now experience
shows us that animals do both possess connatural
spirit and derive power from this. (How this
connatural spirit is maintained in the body
is explained in other passages of our works.)
And this spirit appears to stand to the soul-centre
or original in a relation analogous to that
between the point in a joint which moves
being moved and the unmoved. Now since this
centre is for some animals in the heart,
in the rest in a part analogous with the
heart, we further see the reason for the
connatural spirit being situate where it
actually is found. The question whether the
spirit remains always the same or constantly
changes and is renewed, like the cognate
question about the rest of the parts of the
body, is better postponed. At all events
we see that it is well disposed to excite
movement and to exert power; and the functions
of movement are thrusting and pulling. Accordingly,
the organ of movement must be capable of
expanding and contracting; and this is precisely
the characteristic of spirit. It contracts
and expands naturally, and so is able to
pull and to thrust from one and the same
cause, exhibiting gravity compared with the
fiery element, and levity by comparison with
the opposites of fire. Now that which is
to initiate movement without change of structure
must be of the kind described, for the elementary
bodies prevail over one another in a compound
body by dint of disproportion; the light
is overcome and kept down by the heavier,
and the heavy kept up by the lighter.
We have now explained what the part is which
is moved when the soul originates movement
in the body, and what is the reason for this.
And the animal organism must be conceived
after the similitude of a well- governed
commonwealth. When order is once established
in it there is no more need of a separate
monarch to preside over each several task.
The individuals each play their assigned
part as it is ordered, and one thing follows
another in its accustomed order. So in animals
there is the same orderliness- nature taking
the place of custom- and each part naturally
doing his own work as nature has composed
them. There is no need then of a soul in
each part, but she resides in a kind of central
governing place of the body, and the remaining
parts live by continuity of natural structure,
and play the parts Nature would have them
play.
Part 11
So much then for the voluntary movements
of animal bodies, and the reasons for them.
These bodies, however, display in certain
members involuntary movements too, but most
often non-voluntary movements. By involuntary
I mean motions of the heart and of the privy
member; for often upon an image arising and
without express mandate of the reason these
parts are moved. By non-voluntary I mean
sleep and waking and respiration, and other
similar organic movements. For neither imagination
nor desire is properly mistress of any of
these; but since the animal body must undergo
natural changes of quality, and when the
parts are so altered some must increase and
other decrease, the body must straightway
be moved and change with the changes that
nature makes dependent upon one another.
Now the causes of the movements are natural
changes of temperature, both those coming
from outside the body, and those taking place
within it. So the involuntary movements which
occur in spite of reason in the aforesaid
parts occur when a change of quality supervenes.
For conception and imagination, as we said
above, produce the conditions necessary to
affections, since they bring to bear the
images or forms which tend to create these
states. And the two parts aforesaid display
this motion more conspicuously than the rest,
because each is in a sense a separate vital
organism, the reason being that each contains
vital moisture. In the case of the heart
the cause is plain, for the heart is the
seat of the senses, while an indication that
the generative organ too is vital is that
there flows from it the seminal potency,
itself a kind of organism. Again, it is a
reasonable arrangement that the movements
arise in the centre upon movements in the
parts, and in the parts upon movements in
the centre, and so reach one another. Conceive
A to be the centre or starting point. The
movements then arrive at the centre from
each letter in the diagram we have drawn,
and flow back again from the centre which
is moved and changes, (for the centre is
potentially multiple) the movement of B goes
to B, that of C to C, the movement of both
to both; but from B to C the movements flow
by dint of going from B to A as to a centre,
and then from A to C as from a centre.
Moreover a movement contrary to reason sometimes
does and sometimes does not arise in the
organs on the occasion of the same thoughts;
the reason is that sometimes the matter which
is passive to the impressions is there in
sufficient quantity and of the right quality
and sometimes not.
And so we have finished our account of the
reasons for the parts of each kind of animal,
of the soul, and furthere of sense-perception,
of sleep, of memory, and of movement in general;
it remains to speak of animal generation.
END OF ARISTOTLE ON THE MOTION
OF ANIMALS |