PHYSICS
ARISTOTLE
WRITTEN 350 BC
Translated by R. P..HARDIE AND R. K. GAYE
IN EIGHT WEB-PAGE PARTS - WEB-PAGE
SIX
|
BOOK VI
Part 1
Now if the terms 'continuous', 'in contact',
and 'in succession' are understood as defined
above things being 'continuous' if their
extremities are one, 'in contact' if their
extremities are together, and 'in succession'
if there is nothing of their own kind intermediate
between them-nothing that is continuous can
be composed 'of indivisibles': e. g. a line
cannot be composed of points, the line being
continuous and the point indivisible. For
the extremities of two points can neither
be one (since of an indivisible there can
be no extremity as distinct from some other
part) nor together (since that which has
no parts can have no extremity, the extremity
and the thing of which it is the extremity
being distinct).
Moreover, if that which is continuous is
composed of points, these points must be
either continuous or in contact with one
another: and the same reasoning applies in
the case of all indivisibles. Now for the
reason given above they cannot be continuous:
and one thing can be in contact with another
only if whole is in contact with whole or
part with part or part with whole. But since
indivisibles have no parts, they must be
in contact with one another as whole with
whole. And if they are in contact with one
another as whole with whole, they will not
be continuous: for that which is continuous
has distinct parts: and these parts into
which it is divisible are different in this
way, i. e. spatially separate.
Nor, again, can a point be in succession
to a point or a moment to a moment in such
a way that length can be composed of points
or time of moments: for things are in succession
if there is nothing of their own kind intermediate
between them, whereas that which is intermediate
between points is always a line and that
which is intermediate between moments is
always a period of time.
Again, if length and time could thus be composed
of indivisibles, they could be divided into
indivisibles, since each is divisible into
the parts of which it is composed. But, as
we saw, no continuous thing is divisible
into things without parts. Nor can there
be anything of any other kind intermediate
between the parts or between the moments:
for if there could be any such thing it is
clear that it must be either indivisible
or divisible, and if it is divisible, it
must be divisible either into indivisibles
or into divisibles that are infinitely divisible,
in which case it is continuous.
Moreover, it is plain that everything continuous
is divisible into divisibles that are infinitely
divisible: for if it were divisible into
indivisibles, we should have an indivisible
in contact with an indivisible, since the
extremities of things that are continuous
with one another are one and are in contact.
The same reasoning applies equally to magnitude,
to time, and to motion: either all of these
are composed of indivisibles and are divisible
into indivisibles, or none. This may be made
clear as follows. If a magnitude is composed
of indivisibles, the motion over that magnitude
must be composed of corresponding indivisible
motions: e. g. if the magnitude ABG is composed
of the indivisibles A, B, G, each corresponding
part of the motion DEZ of O over ABG is indivisible.
Therefore, since where there is motion there
must be something that is in motion, and
where there is something in motion there
must be motion, therefore the being-moved
will also be composed of indivisibles. So
O traversed A when its motion was D, B when
its motion was E, and G similarly when its
motion was Z. Now a thing that is in motion
from one place to another cannot at the moment
when it was in motion both be in motion and
at the same time have completed its motion
at the place to which it was in motion: e.
g. if a man is walking to Thebes, he cannot
be walking to Thebes and at the same time
have completed his walk to Thebes: and, as
we saw, O traverses a the partless section
A in virtue of the presence of the motion
D. Consequently, if O actually passed through
A after being in process of passing through,
the motion must be divisible: for at the
time when O was passing through, it neither
was at rest nor had completed its passage
but was in an intermediate state: while if
it is passing through and has completed its
passage at the same moment, then that which
is walking will at the moment when it is
walking have completed its walk and will
be in the place to which it is walking; that
is to say, it will have completed its motion
at the place to which it is in motion. And
if a thing is in motion over the whole Kbg
and its motion is the three D, E, and Z,
and if it is not in motion at all over the
partless section A but has completed its
motion over it, then the motion will consist
not of motions but of starts, and will take
place by a thing's having completed a motion
without being in motion: for on this assumption
it has completed its passage through A without
passing through it. So it will be possible
for a thing to have completed a walk without
ever walking: for on this assumption it has
completed a walk over a particular distance
without walking over that distance. Since,
then, everything must be either at rest or
in motion, and O is therefore at rest in
each of the sections A, B, and G, it follows
that a thing can be continuously at rest
and at the same time in motion: for, as we
saw, O is in motion over the whole ABG and
at rest in any part (and consequently in
the whole) of it. Moreover, if the indivisibles
composing DEZ are motions, it would be possible
for a thing in spite of the presence in it
of motion to be not in motion but at rest,
while if they are not motions, it would be
possible for motion to be composed of something
other than motions.
And if length and motion are thus indivisible,
it is neither more nor less necessary that
time also be similarly indivisible, that
is to say be composed of indivisible moments:
for if the whole distance is divisible and
an equal velocity will cause a thing to pass
through less of it in less time, the time
must also be divisible, and conversely, if
the time in which a thing is carried over
the section A is divisible, this section
A must also be divisible.
Part 2
And since every magnitude is divisible into
magnitudes-for we have shown that it is impossible
for anything continuous to be composed of
indivisible parts, and every magnitude is
continuous-it necessarily follows that the
quicker of two things traverses a greater
magnitude in an equal time, an equal magnitude
in less time, and a greater magnitude in
less time, in conformity with the definition
sometimes given of 'the quicker'. Suppose
that A is quicker than B. Now since of two
things that which changes sooner is quicker,
in the time ZH, in which A has changed from
G to D, B will not yet have arrived at D
but will be short of it: so that in an equal
time the quicker will pass over a greater
magnitude. More than this, it will pass over
a greater magnitude in less time: for in
the time in which A has arrived at D, B being
the slower has arrived, let us say, at E.
Then since A has occupied the whole time
ZH in arriving at D, will have arrived at
O in less time than this, say ZK. Now the
magnitude GO that A has passed over is greater
than the magnitude GE, and the time ZK is
less than the whole time ZH: so that the
quicker will pass over a greater magnitude
in less time. And from this it is also clear
that the quicker will pass over an equal
magnitude in less time than the slower. For
since it passes over the greater magnitude
in less time than the slower, and
(regarded by itself) passes over LM the greater
in more time than LX the lesser, the time
PRh in which it passes over LM will be more
than the time PS, which it passes over LX:
so that, the time PRh being less than the
time PCh in which the slower passes over
LX, the time PS will also be less than the
time PX: for it is less than the time PRh,
and that which is less than something else
that is less than a thing is also itself
less than that thing. Hence it follows that
the quicker will traverse an equal magnitude
in less time than the slower. Again, since
the motion of anything must always occupy
either an equal time or less or more time
in comparison with that of another thing,
and since, whereas a thing is slower if its
motion occupies more time and of equal velocity
if its motion occupies an equal time, the
quicker is neither of equal velocity nor
slower, it follows that the motion of the
quicker can occupy neither an equal time
nor more time. It can only be, then, that
it occupies less time, and thus we get the
necessary consequence that the quicker will
pass over an equal magnitude
(as well as a greater) in less time than
the slower.
And since every motion is in time and a motion
may occupy any time, and the motion of everything
that is in motion may be either quicker or
slower, both quicker motion and slower motion
may occupy any time: and this being so, it
necessarily follows that time also is continuous.
By continuous I mean that which is divisible
into divisibles that are infinitely divisible:
and if we take this as the definition of
continuous, it follows necessarily that time
is continuous. For since it has been shown
that the quicker will pass over an equal
magnitude in less time than the slower, suppose
that A is quicker and B slower, and that
the slower has traversed the magnitude GD
in the time ZH. Now it is clear that the
quicker will traverse the same magnitude
in less time than this: let us say in the
time ZO. Again, since the quicker has passed
over the whole D in the time ZO, the slower
will in the same time pass over GK, say,
which is less than GD. And since B, the slower,
has passed over GK in the time ZO, the quicker
will pass over it in less time: so that the
time ZO will again be divided. And if this
is divided the magnitude GK will also be
divided just as GD was: and again, if the
magnitude is divided, the time will also
be divided. And we can carry on this process
for ever, taking the slower after the quicker
and the quicker after the slower alternately,
and using what has been demonstrated at each
stage as a new point of departure: for the
quicker will divide the time and the slower
will divide the length. If, then, this alternation
always holds good, and at every turn involves
a division, it is evident that all time must
be continuous. And at the same time it is
clear that all magnitude is also continuous;
for the divisions of which time and magnitude
respectively are susceptible are the same
and equal.
Moreover, the current popular arguments make
it plain that, if time is continuous, magnitude
is continuous also, inasmuch as a thing asses
over half a given magnitude in half the time
taken to cover the whole: in fact without
qualification it passes over a less magnitude
in less time; for the divisions of time and
of magnitude will be the same. And if either
is infinite, so is the other, and the one
is so in the same way as the other; i. e.
if time is infinite in respect of its extremities,
length is also infinite in respect of its
extremities: if time is infinite in respect
of divisibility, length is also infinite
in respect of divisibility: and if time is
infinite in both respects, magnitude is also
infinite in both respects.
Hence Zeno's argument makes a false assumption
in asserting that it is impossible for a
thing to pass over or severally to come in
contact with infinite things in a finite
time. For there are two senses in which length
and time and generally anything continuous
are called 'infinite': they are called so
either in respect of divisibility or in respect
of their extremities. So while a thing in
a finite time cannot come in contact with
things quantitatively infinite, it can come
in contact with things infinite in respect
of divisibility: for in this sense the time
itself is also infinite: and so we find that
the time occupied by the passage over the
infinite is not a finite but an infinite
time, and the contact with the infinites
is made by means of moments not finite but
infinite in number.
The passage over the infinite, then, cannot
occupy a finite time, and the passage over
the finite cannot occupy an infinite time:
if the time is infinite the magnitude must
be infinite also, and if the magnitude is
infinite, so also is the time. This may be
shown as follows. Let AB be a finite magnitude,
and let us suppose that it is traversed in
infinite time G, and let a finite period
GD of the time be taken. Now in this period
the thing in motion will pass over a certain
segment of the magnitude: let BE be the segment
that it has thus passed over. (This will
be either an exact measure of AB or less
or greater than an exact measure: it makes
no difference which it is.) Then, since a
magnitude equal to BE will always be passed
over in an equal time, and BE measures the
whole magnitude, the whole time occupied
in passing over AB will be finite: for it
will be divisible into periods equal in number
to the segments into which the magnitude
is divisible. Moreover, if it is the case
that infinite time is not occupied in passing
over every magnitude, but it is possible
to ass over some magnitude, say BE, in a
finite time, and if this BE measures the
whole of which it is a part, and if an equal
magnitude is passed over in an equal time,
then it follows that the time like the magnitude
is finite. That infinite time will not be
occupied in passing over BE is evident if
the time be taken as limited in one direction:
for as the part will be passed over in less
time than the whole, the time occupied in
traversing this part must be finite, the
limit in one direction being given. The same
reasoning will also show the falsity of the
assumption that infinite length can be traversed
in a finite time. It is evident, then, from
what has been said that neither a line nor
a surface nor in fact anything continuous
can be indivisible.
This conclusion follows not only from the
present argument but from the consideration
that the opposite assumption implies the
divisibility of the indivisible. For since
the distinction of quicker and slower may
apply to motions occupying any period of
time and in an equal time the quicker passes
over a greater length, it may happen that
it will pass over a length twice, or one
and a half times, as great as that passed
over by the slower: for their respective
velocities may stand to one another in this
proportion. Suppose, then, that the quicker
has in the same time been carried over a
length one and a half times as great as that
traversed by the slower, and that the respective
magnitudes are divided, that of the quicker,
the magnitude ABGD, into three indivisibles,
and that of the slower into the two indivisibles
EZ, ZH. Then the time may also be divided
into three indivisibles, for an equal magnitude
will be passed over in an equal time. Suppose
then that it is thus divided into KL, Lm,
MN. Again, since in the same time the slower
has been carried over Ez, ZH, the time may
also be similarly divided into two. Thus
the indivisible will be divisible, and that
which has no parts will be passed over not
in an indivisible but in a greater time.
It is evident, therefore, that nothing continuous
is without parts.
Part 3
The present also is necessarily indivisible-the
present, that is, not in the sense in which
the word is applied to one thing in virtue
of another, but in its proper and primary
sense; in which sense it is inherent in all
time. For the present is something that is
an extremity of the past (no part of the
future being on this side of it) and also
of the future
(no part of the past being on the other side
of it): it is, as we have said, a limit of
both. And if it is once shown that it is
essentially of this character and one and
the same, it will at once be evident also
that it is indivisible.
Now the present that is the extremity of
both times must be one and the same: for
if each extremity were different, the one
could not be in succession to the other,
because nothing continuous can be composed
of things having no parts: and if the one
is apart from the other, there will be time
intermediate between them, because everything
continuous is such that there is something
intermediate between its limits and described
by the same name as itself. But if the intermediate
thing is time, it will be divisible: for
all time has been shown to be divisible.
Thus on this assumption the present is divisible.
But if the present is divisible, there will
be part of the past in the future and part
of the future in the past: for past time
will be marked off from future time at the
actual point of division. Also the present
will be a present not in the proper sense
but in virtue of something else: for the
division which yields it will not be a division
proper. Furthermore, there will be a part
of the present that is past and a part that
is future, and it will not always be the
same part that is past or future: in fact
one and the same present will not be simultaneous:
for the time may be divided at many points.
If, therefore, the present cannot possibly
have these characteristics, it follows that
it must be the same present that belongs
to each of the two times. But if this is
so it is evident that the present is also
indivisible: for if it is divisible it will
be involved in the same implications as before.
It is clear, then, from what has been said
that time contains something indivisible,
and this is what we call a present.
We will now show that nothing can be in motion
in a present. For if this is possible, there
can be both quicker and slower motion in
the present. Suppose then that in the present
N the quicker has traversed the distance
AB. That being so, the slower will in the
same present traverse a distance less than
AB, say AG. But since the slower will have
occupied the whole present in traversing
AG, the quicker will occupy less than this
in traversing it. Thus we shall have a division
of the present, whereas we found it to be
indivisible. It is impossible, therefore,
for anything to be in motion in a present.
Nor can anything be at rest in a present:
for, as we were saying, only can be at rest
which is naturally designed to be in motion
but is not in motion when, where, or as it
would naturally be so: since, therefore,
nothing is naturally designed to be in motion
in a present, it is clear that nothing can
be at rest in a present either.
Moreover, inasmuch as it is the same present
that belongs to both the times, and it is
possible for a thing to be in motion throughout
one time and to be at rest throughout the
other, and that which is in motion or at
rest for the whole of a time will be in motion
or at rest as the case may be in any part
of it in which it is naturally designed to
be in motion or at rest: this being so, the
assumption that there can be motion or rest
in a present will carry with it the implication
that the same thing can at the same time
be at rest and in motion: for both the times
have the same extremity, viz. the present.
Again, when we say that a thing is at rest,
we imply that its condition in whole and
in part is at the time of speaking uniform
with what it was previously: but the present
contains no 'previously': consequently, there
can be no rest in it.
It follows then that the motion of that which
is in motion and the rest of that which is
at rest must occupy time.
Part 4
Further, everything that changes must be
divisible. For since every change is from
something to something, and when a thing
is at the goal of its change it is no longer
changing, and when both it itself and all
its parts are at the starting-point of its
change it is not changing (for that which
is in whole and in part in an unvarying condition
is not in a state of change); it follows,
therefore, that part of that which is changing
must be at the starting-point and part at
the goal: for as a whole it cannot be in
both or in neither.
(Here by 'goal of change' I mean that which
comes first in the process of change: e.
g. in a process of change from white the
goal in question will be grey, not black:
for it is not necessary that that that which
is changing should be at either of the extremes.)
It is evident, therefore, that everything
that changes must be divisible.
Now motion is divisible in two senses. In
the first place it is divisible in virtue
of the time that it occupies. In the second
place it is divisible according to the motions
of the several parts of that which is in
motion: e. g. if the whole AG is in motion,
there will be a motion of AB and a motion
of BG. That being so, let DE be the motion
of the part AB and EZ the motion of the part
BG. Then the whole Dz must be the motion
of AG: for DZ must constitute the motion
of AG inasmuch as DE and EZ severally constitute
the motions of each of its parts. But the
motion of a thing can never be constituted
by the motion of something else: consequently
the whole motion is the motion of the whole
magnitude.
Again, since every motion is a motion of
something, and the whole motion DZ is not
the motion of either of the parts (for each
of the parts DE, EZ is the motion of one
of the parts AB, BG) or of anything else
(for, the whole motion being the motion of
a whole, the parts of the motion are the
motions of the parts of that whole: and the
parts of DZ are the motions of AB, BG and
of nothing else: for, as we saw, a motion
that is one cannot be the motion of more
things than one): since this is so, the whole
motion will be the motion of the magnitude
ABG.
Again, if there is a motion of the whole
other than DZ, say the the of each of the
arts may be subtracted from it: and these
motions will be equal to DE, EZ respectively:
for the motion of that which is one must
be one. So if the whole motion OI may be
divided into the motions of the parts, OI
will be equal to DZ: if on the other hand
there is any remainder, say KI, this will
be a motion of nothing: for it can be the
motion neither of the whole nor of the parts
(as the motion of that which is one must
be one) nor of anything else: for a motion
that is continuous must be the motion of
things that are continuous. And the same
result follows if the division of OI reveals
a surplus on the side of the motions of the
parts. Consequently, if this is impossible,
the whole motion must be the same as and
equal to DZ.
This then is what is meant by the division
of motion according to the motions of the
parts: and it must be applicable to everything
that is divisible into parts.
Motion is also susceptible of another kind
of division, that according to time. For
since all motion is in time and all time
is divisible, and in less time the motion
is less, it follows that every motion must
be divisible according to time. And since
everything that is in motion is in motion
in a certain sphere and for a certain time
and has a motion belonging to it, it follows
that the time, the motion, the being-in-motion,
the thing that is in motion, and the sphere
of the motion must all be susceptible of
the same divisions
(though spheres of motion are not all divisible
in a like manner: thus quantity is essentially,
quality accidentally divisible). For suppose
that A is the time occupied by the motion
B. Then if all the time has been occupied
by the whole motion, it will take less of
the motion to occupy half the time, less
again to occupy a further subdivision of
the time, and so on to infinity. Again, the
time will be divisible similarly to the motion:
for if the whole motion occupies all the
time half the motion will occupy half the
time, and less of the motion again will occupy
less of the time.
In the same way the being-in-motion will
also be divisible. For let G be the whole
being-in-motion. Then the being-in-motion
that corresponds to half the motion will
be less than the whole being-in-motion, that
which corresponds to a quarter of the motion
will be less again, and so on to infinity.
Moreover by setting out successively the
being-in-motion corresponding to each of
the two motions DG (say) and GE, we may argue
that the whole being-in-motion will correspond
to the whole motion (for if it were some
other being-in-motion that corresponded to
the whole motion, there would be more than
one being-in motion corresponding to the
same motion), the argument being the same
as that whereby we showed that the motion
of a thing is divisible into the motions
of the parts of the thing: for if we take
separately the being-in motion corresponding
to each of the two motions, we shall see
that the whole being-in motion is continuous.
The same reasoning will show the divisibility
of the length, and in fact of everything
that forms a sphere of change (though some
of these are only accidentally divisible
because that which changes is so): for the
division of one term will involve the division
of all. So, too, in the matter of their being
finite or infinite, they will all alike be
either the one or the other. And we now see
that in most cases the fact that all the
terms are divisible or infinite is a direct
consequence of the fact that the thing that
changes is divisible or infinite: for the
attributes 'divisible' and 'infinite' belong
in the first instance to the thing that changes.
That divisibility does so we have already
shown: that infinity does so will be made
clear in what follows?
Part 5
Since everything that changes changes from
something to something, that which has changed
must at the moment when it has first changed
be in that to which it has changed. For that
which changes retires from or leaves that
from which it changes: and leaving, if not
identical with changing, is at any rate a
consequence of it. And if leaving is a consequence
of changing, having left is a consequence
of having changed: for there is a like relation
between the two in each case.
One kind of change, then, being change in
a relation of contradiction, where a thing
has changed from not-being to being it has
left not-being. Therefore it will be in being:
for everything must either be or not be.
It is evident, then, that in contradictory
change that which has changed must be in
that to which it has changed. And if this
is true in this kind of change, it will be
true in all other kinds as well: for in this
matter what holds good in the case of one
will hold good likewise in the case of the
rest.
Moreover, if we take each kind of change
separately, the truth of our conclusion will
be equally evident, on the ground that that
that which has changed must be somewhere
or in something. For, since it has left that
from which it has changed and must be somewhere,
it must be either in that to which it has
changed or in something else. If, then, that
which has changed to B is in something other
than B, say G, it must again be changing
from G to B: for it cannot be assumed that
there is no interval between G and B, since
change is continuous. Thus we have the result
that the thing that has changed, at the moment
when it has changed, is changing to that
to which it has changed, which is impossible:
that which has changed, therefore, must be
in that to which it has changed. So it is
evident likewise that that that which has
come to be, at the moment when it has come
to be, will be, and that which has ceased
to be will not-be: for what we have said
applies universally to every kind of change,
and its truth is most obvious in the case
of contradictory change. It is clear, then,
that that which has changed, at the moment
when it has first changed, is in that to
which it has changed.
We will now show that the 'primary when'
in which that which has changed effected
the completion of its change must be indivisible,
where by 'primary' I mean possessing the
characteristics in question of itself and
not in virtue of the possession of them by
something else belonging to it. For let AG
be divisible, and let it be divided at B.
If then the completion of change has been
effected in AB or again in BG, AG cannot
be the primary thing in which the completion
of change has been effected. If, on the other
hand, it has been changing in both AB and
BG (for it must either have changed or be
changing in each of them), it must have been
changing in the whole AG: but our assumption
was that AG contains only the completion
of the change. It is equally impossible to
suppose that one part of AG contains the
process and the other the completion of the
change: for then we shall have something
prior to what is primary. So that in which
the completion of change has been effected
must be indivisible. It is also evident,
therefore, that that that in which that which
has ceased to be has ceased to be and that
in which that which has come to be has come
to be are indivisible.
But there are two senses of the expression
'the primary when in which something has
changed'. On the one hand it may mean the
primary when containing the completion of
the process of change- the moment when it
is correct to say 'it has changed': on the
other hand it may mean the primary when containing
the beginning of the process of change. Now
the primary when that has reference to the
end of the change is something really existent:
for a change may really be completed, and
there is such a thing as an end of change,
which we have in fact shown to be indivisible
because it is a limit. But that which has
reference to the beginning is not existent
at all: for there is no such thing as a beginning
of a process of change, and the time occupied
by the change does not contain any primary
when in which the change began. For suppose
that AD is such a primary when. Then it cannot
be indivisible: for, if it were, the moment
immediately preceding the change and the
moment in which the change begins would be
consecutive (and moments cannot be consecutive).
Again, if the changing thing is at rest in
the whole preceding time GA (for we may suppose
that it is at rest), it is at rest in A also:
so if AD is without parts, it will simultaneously
be at rest and have changed: for it is at
rest in A and has changed in D. Since then
AD is not without parts, it must be divisible,
and the changing thing must have changed
in every part of it (for if it has changed
in neither of the two parts into which AD
is divided, it has not changed in the whole
either: if, on the other hand, it is in process
of change in both parts, it is likewise in
process of change in the whole: and if, again,
it has changed in one of the two parts, the
whole is not the primary when in which it
has changed: it must therefore have changed
in every part). It is evident, then, that
with reference to the beginning of change
there is no primary when in which change
has been effected: for the divisions are
infinite.
So, too, of that which has changed there
is no primary part that has changed. For
suppose that of AE the primary part that
has changed is Az (everything that changes
having been shown to be divisible): and let
OI be the time in which DZ has changed. If,
then, in the whole time DZ has changed, in
half the time there will be a part that has
changed, less than and therefore prior to
DZ: and again there will be another part
prior to this, and yet another, and so on
to infinity. Thus of that which changes there
cannot be any primary part that has changed.
It is evident, then, from what has been said,
that neither of that which changes nor of
the time in which it changes is there any
primary part.
With regard, however, to the actual subject
of change-that is to say that in respect
of which a thing changes-there is a difference
to be observed. For in a process of change
we may distinguish three terms-that which
changes, that in which it changes, and the
actual subject of change, e. g. the man,
the time, and the fair complexion. Of these
the man and the time are divisible: but with
the fair complexion it is otherwise (though
they are all divisible accidentally, for
that in which the fair complexion or any
other quality is an accident is divisible).
For of actual subjects of change it will
be seen that those which are classed as essentially,
not accidentally, divisible have no primary
part. Take the case of magnitudes: let AB
be a magnitude, and suppose that it has moved
from B to a primary 'where' G. Then if BG
is taken to be indivisible, two things without
parts will have to be contiguous (which is
impossible): if on the other hand it is taken
to be divisible, there will be something
prior to G to which the magnitude has changed,
and something else again prior to that, and
so on to infinity, because the process of
division may be continued without end. Thus
there can be no primary 'where' to which
a thing has changed. And if we take the case
of quantitative change, we shall get a like
result, for here too the change is in something
continuous. It is evident, then, that only
in qualitative motion can there be anything
essentially indivisible.
Part 6
Now everything that changes changes time,
and that in two senses: for the time in which
a thing is said to change may be the primary
time, or on the other hand it may have an
extended reference, as e. g. when we say
that a thing changes in a particular year
because it changes in a particular day. That
being so, that which changes must be changing
in any part of the primary time in which
it changes. This is clear from our definition
of 'primary', in which the word is said to
express just this: it may also, however,
be made evident by the following argument.
Let ChRh be the primary time in which that
which is in motion is in motion: and (as
all time is divisible) let it be divided
at K. Now in the time ChK it either is in
motion or is not in motion, and the same
is likewise true of the time KRh. Then if
it is in motion in neither of the two parts,
it will be at rest in the whole: for it is
impossible that it should be in motion in
a time in no part of which it is in motion.
If on the other hand it is in motion in only
one of the two parts of the time, ChRh cannot
be the primary time in which it is in motion:
for its motion will have reference to a time
other than ChRh. It must, then, have been
in motion in any part of ChRh.
And now that this has been proved, it is
evident that everything that is in motion
must have been in motion before. For if that
which is in motion has traversed the distance
KL in the primary time ChRh, in half the
time a thing that is in motion with equal
velocity and began its motion at the same
time will have traversed half the distance.
But if this second thing whose velocity is
equal has traversed a certain distance in
a certain time, the original thing that is
in motion must have traversed the same distance
in the same time. Hence that which is in
motion must have been in motion before.
Again, if by taking the extreme moment of
the time-for it is the moment that defines
the time, and time is that which is intermediate
between moments-we are enabled to say that
motion has taken place in the whole time
ChRh or in fact in any period of it, motion
may likewise be said to have taken place
in every other such period. But half the
time finds an extreme in the point of division.
Therefore motion will have taken place in
half the time and in fact in any part of
it: for as soon as any division is made there
is always a time defined by moments. If,
then, all time is divisible, and that which
is intermediate between moments is time,
everything that is changing must have completed
an infinite number of changes.
Again, since a thing that changes continuously
and has not perished or ceased from its change
must either be changing or have changed in
any part of the time of its change, and since
it cannot be changing in a moment, it follows
that it must have changed at every moment
in the time: consequently, since the moments
are infinite in number, everything that is
changing must have completed an infinite
number of changes.
And not only must that which is changing
have changed, but that which has changed
must also previously have been changing,
since everything that has changed from something
to something has changed in a period of time.
For suppose that a thing has changed from
A to B in a moment. Now the moment in which
it has changed cannot be the same as that
in which it is at A (since in that case it
would be in A and B at once): for we have
shown above that that that which has changed,
when it has changed, is not in that from
which it has changed. If, on the other hand,
it is a different moment, there will be a
period of time intermediate between the two:
for, as we saw, moments are not consecutive.
Since, then, it has changed in a period of
time, and all time is divisible, in half
the time it will have completed another change,
in a quarter another, and so on to infinity:
consequently when it has changed, it must
have previously been changing.
Moreover, the truth of what has been said
is more evident in the case of magnitude,
because the magnitude over which what is
changing changes is continuous. For suppose
that a thing has changed from G to D. Then
if GD is indivisible, two things without
parts will be consecutive. But since this
is impossible, that which is intermediate
between them must be a magnitude and divisible
into an infinite number of segments: consequently,
before the change is completed, the thing
changes to those segments. Everything that
has changed, therefore, must previously have
been changing: for the same proof also holds
good of change with respect to what is not
continuous, changes, that is to say, between
contraries and between contradictories. In
such cases we have only to take the time
in which a thing has changed and again apply
the same reasoning. So that which has changed
must have been changing and that which is
changing must have changed, and a process
of change is preceded by a completion of
change and a completion by a process: and
we can never take any stage and say that
it is absolutely the first. The reason of
this is that no two things without parts
can be contiguous, and therefore in change
the process of division is infinite, just
as lines may be infinitely divided so that
one part is continually increasing and the
other continually decreasing.
So it is evident also that that that which
has become must previously have been in process
of becoming, and that which is in process
of becoming must previously have become,
everything (that is) that is divisible and
continuous: though it is not always the actual
thing that is in process of becoming of which
this is true: sometimes it is something else,
that is to say, some part of the thing in
question, e. g. the foundation-stone of a
house. So, too, in the case of that which
is perishing and that which has perished:
for that which becomes and that which perishes
must contain an element of infiniteness as
an immediate consequence of the fact that
they are continuous things: and so a thing
cannot be in process of becoming without
having become or have become without having
been in process of becoming. So, too, in
the case of perishing and having perished:
perishing must be preceded by having perished,
and having perished must be preceded by perishing.
It is evident, then, that that which has
become must previously have been in process
of becoming, and that which is in process
of becoming must previously have become:
for all magnitudes and all periods of time
are infinitely divisible.
Consequently no absolutely first stage of
change can be represented by any particular
part of space or time which the changing
thing may occupy.
Part 7
Now since the motion of everything that is
in motion occupies a period of time, and
a greater magnitude is traversed in a longer
time, it is impossible that a thing should
undergo a finite motion in an infinite time,
if this is understood to mean not that the
same motion or a part of it is continually
repeated, but that the whole infinite time
is occupied by the whole finite motion. In
all cases where a thing is in motion with
uniform velocity it is clear that the finite
magnitude is traversed in a finite time.
For if we take a part of the motion which
shall be a measure of the whole, the whole
motion is completed in as many equal periods
of the time as there are parts of the motion.
Consequently, since these parts are finite,
both in size individually and in number collectively,
the whole time must also be finite: for it
will be a multiple of the portion, equal
to the time occupied in completing the aforesaid
part multiplied by the number of the parts.
But it makes no difference even if the velocity
is not uniform. For let us suppose that the
line AB represents a finite stretch over
which a thing has been moved in the given
time, and let GD be the infinite time. Now
if one part of the stretch must have been
traversed before another part (this is clear,
that in the earlier and in the later part
of the time a different part of the stretch
has been traversed: for as the time lengthens
a different part of the motion will always
be completed in it, whether the thing in
motion changes with uniform velocity or not:
and whether the rate of motion increases
or diminishes or remains stationary this
is none the less so), let us then take AE
a part of the whole stretch of motion AB
which shall be a measure of AB. Now this
part of the motion occupies a certain period
of the infinite time: it cannot itself occupy
an infinite time, for we are assuming that
that is occupied by the whole AB. And if
again I take another part equal to AE, that
also must occupy a finite time in consequence
of the same assumption. And if I go on taking
parts in this way, on the one hand there
is no part which will be a measure of the
infinite time (for the infinite cannot be
composed of finite parts whether equal or
unequal, because there must be some unity
which will be a measure of things finite
in multitude or in magnitude, which, whether
they are equal or unequal, are none the less
limited in magnitude); while on the other
hand the finite stretch of motion AB is a
certain multiple of AE: consequently the
motion AB must be accomplished in a finite
time. Moreover it is the same with coming
to rest as with motion. And so it is impossible
for one and the same thing to be infinitely
in process of becoming or of perishing. The
reasoning he will prove that in a finite
time there cannot be an infinite extent of
motion or of coming to rest, whether the
motion is regular or irregular. For if we
take a part which shall be a measure of the
whole time, in this part a certain fraction,
not the whole, of the magnitude will be traversed,
because we assume that the traversing of
the whole occupies all the time. Again, in
another equal part of the time another part
of the magnitude will be traversed: and similarly
in each part of the time that we take, whether
equal or unequal to the part originally taken.
It makes no difference whether the parts
are equal or not, if only each is finite:
for it is clear that while the time is exhausted
by the subtraction of its parts, the infinite
magnitude will not be thus exhausted, since
the process of subtraction is finite both
in respect of the quantity subtracted and
of the number of times a subtraction is made.
Consequently the infinite magnitude will
not be traversed in finite time: and it makes
no difference whether the magnitude is infinite
in only one direction or in both: for the
same reasoning will hold good.
This having been proved, it is evident that
neither can a finite magnitude traverse an
infinite magnitude in a finite time, the
reason being the same as that given above:
in part of the time it will traverse a finite
magnitude and in each several part likewise,
so that in the whole time it will traverse
a finite magnitude.
And since a finite magnitude will not traverse
an infinite in a finite time, it is clear
that neither will an infinite traverse a
finite in a finite time. For if the infinite
could traverse the finite, the finite could
traverse the infinite; for it makes no difference
which of the two is the thing in motion;
either case involves the traversing of the
infinite by the finite. For when the infinite
magnitude A is in motion a part of it, say
GD, will occupy the finite and then another,
and then another, and so on to infinity.
Thus the two results will coincide: the infinite
will have completed a motion over the finite
and the finite will have traversed the infinite:
for it would seem to be impossible for the
motion of the infinite over the finite to
occur in any way other than by the finite
traversing the infinite either by locomotion
over it or by measuring it. Therefore, since
this is impossible, the infinite cannot traverse
the finite.
Nor again will the infinite traverse the
infinite in a finite time. Otherwise it would
also traverse the finite, for the infinite
includes the finite. We can further prove
this in the same way by taking the time as
our starting-point.
Since, then, it is established that in a
finite time neither will the finite traverse
the infinite, nor the infinite the finite,
nor the infinite the infinite, it is evident
also that in a finite time there cannot be
infinite motion: for what difference does
it make whether we take the motion or the
magnitude to be infinite? If either of the
two is infinite, the other must be so likewise:
for all locomotion is in space.
Part 8
Since everything to which motion or rest
is natural is in motion or at rest in the
natural time, place, and manner, that which
is coming to a stand, when it is coming to
a stand, must be in motion: for if it is
not in motion it must be at rest: but that
which is at rest cannot be coming to rest.
From this it evidently follows that coming
to a stand must occupy a period of time:
for the motion of that which is in motion
occupies a period of time, and that which
is coming to a stand has been shown to be
in motion: consequently coming to a stand
must occupy a period of time.
Again, since the terms 'quicker' and 'slower'
are used only of that which occupies a period
of time, and the process of coming to a stand
may be quicker or slower, the same conclusion
follows.
And that which is coming to a stand must
be coming to a stand in any part of the primary
time in which it is coming to a stand. For
if it is coming to a stand in neither of
two parts into which the time may be divided,
it cannot be coming to a stand in the whole
time, with the result that that that which
is coming to a stand will not be coming to
a stand. If on the other hand it is coming
to a stand in only one of the two parts of
the time, the whole cannot be the primary
time in which it is coming to a stand: for
it is coming to a stand in the whole time
not primarily but in virtue of something
distinct from itself, the argument being
the same as that which we used above about
things in motion.
And just as there is no primary time in which
that which is in motion is in motion, so
too there is no primary time in which that
which is coming to a stand is coming to a
stand, there being no primary stage either
of being in motion or of coming to a stand.
For let AB be the primary time in which a
thing is coming to a stand. Now AB cannot
be without parts: for there cannot be motion
in that which is without parts, because the
moving thing would necessarily have been
already moved for part of the time of its
movement: and that which is coming to a stand
has been shown to be in motion. But since
Ab is therefore divisible, the thing is coming
to a stand in every one of the parts of AB:
for we have shown above that it is coming
to a stand in every one of the parts in which
it is primarily coming to a stand. Since
then, that in which primarily a thing is
coming to a stand must be a period of time
and not something indivisible, and since
all time is infinitely divisible, there cannot
be anything in which primarily it is coming
to a stand.
Nor again can there be a primary time at
which the being at rest of that which is
at rest occurred: for it cannot have occurred
in that which has no parts, because there
cannot be motion in that which is indivisible,
and that in which rest takes place is the
same as that in which motion takes place:
for we defined a state of rest to be the
state of a thing to which motion is natural
but which is not in motion when (that is
to say in that in which) motion would be
natural to it. Again, our use of the phrase
'being at rest' also implies that the previous
state of a thing is still unaltered, not
one point only but two at least being thus
needed to determine its presence: consequently
that in which a thing is at rest cannot be
without parts. Since, then it is divisible,
it must be a period of time, and the thing
must be at rest in every one of its parts,
as may be shown by the same method as that
used above in similar demonstrations.
So there can be no primary part of the time:
and the reason is that rest and motion are
always in a period of time, and a period
of time has no primary part any more than
a magnitude or in fact anything continuous:
for everything continuous is divisible into
an infinite number of parts.
And since everything that is in motion is
in motion in a period of time and changes
from something to something, when its motion
is comprised within a particular period of
time essentially-that is to say when it fills
the whole and not merely a part of the time
in question-it is impossible that in that
time that which is in motion should be over
against some particular thing primarily.
For if a thing-itself and each of its parts-occupies
the same space for a definite period of time,
it is at rest: for it is in just these circumstances
that we use the term 'being at rest'-when
at one moment after another it can be said
with truth that a thing, itself and its parts,
occupies the same space. So if this is being
at rest it is impossible for that which is
changing to be as a whole, at the time when
it is primarily changing, over against any
particular thing (for the whole period of
time is divisible), so that in one part of
it after another it will be true to say that
the thing, itself and its parts, occupies
the same space. If this is not so and the
aforesaid proposition is true only at a single
moment, then the thing will be over against
a particular thing not for any period of
time but only at a moment that limits the
time. It is true that at any moment it is
always over against something stationary:
but it is not at rest: for at a moment it
is not possible for anything to be either
in motion or at rest. So while it is true
to say that that which is in motion is at
a moment not in motion and is opposite some
particular thing, it cannot in a period of
time be over against that which is at rest:
for that would involve the conclusion that
that which is in locomotion is at rest.
Part 9
Zeno's reasoning, however, is fallacious,
when he says that if everything when it occupies
an equal space is at rest, and if that which
is in locomotion is always occupying such
a space at any moment, the flying arrow is
therefore motionless. This is false, for
time is not composed of indivisible moments
any more than any other magnitude is composed
of indivisibles.
Zeno's arguments about motion, which cause
so much disquietude to those who try to solve
the problems that they present, are four
in number. The first asserts the non-existence
of motion on the ground that that which is
in locomotion must arrive at the half-way
stage before it arrives at the goal. This
we have discussed above.
The second is the so-called 'Achilles', and
it amounts to this, that in a race the quickest
runner can never overtake the slowest, since
the pursuer must first reach the point whence
the pursued started, so that the slower must
always hold a lead. This argument is the
same in principle as that which depends on
bisection, though it differs from it in that
the spaces with which we successively have
to deal are not divided into halves. The
result of the argument is that the slower
is not overtaken: but it proceeds along the
same lines as the bisection-argument (for
in both a division of the space in a certain
way leads to the result that the goal is
not reached, though the 'Achilles' goes further
in that it affirms that even the quickest
runner in legendary tradition must fail in
his pursuit of the slowest), so that the
solution must be the same. And the axiom
that that which holds a lead is never overtaken
is false: it is not overtaken, it is true,
while it holds a lead: but it is overtaken
nevertheless if it is granted that it traverses
the finite distance prescribed. These then
are two of his arguments.
The third is that already given above, to
the effect that the flying arrow is at rest,
which result follows from the assumption
that time is composed of moments: if this
assumption is not granted, the conclusion
will not follow.
The fourth argument is that concerning the
two rows of bodies, each row being composed
of an equal number of bodies of equal size,
passing each other on a race-course as they
proceed with equal velocity in opposite directions,
the one row originally occupying the space
between the goal and the middle point of
the course and the other that between the
middle point and the starting-post. This,
he thinks, involves the conclusion that half
a given time is equal to double that time.
The fallacy of the reasoning lies in the
assumption that a body occupies an equal
time in passing with equal velocity a body
that is in motion and a body of equal size
that is at rest; which is false. For instance
(so runs the argument), let A, A... be the
stationary bodies of equal size, B, B...
the bodies, equal in number and in size to
A, A..., originally occupying the half of
the course from the starting-post to the
middle of the A's, and G, G... those originally
occupying the other half from the goal to
the middle of the A's, equal in number, size,
and velocity to B, B.... Then three consequences
follow:
First, as the B's and the G's pass one another,
the first B reaches the last G at the same
moment as the first G reaches the last B.
Secondly at this moment the first G has passed
all the A's, whereas the first B has passed
only half the A's, and has consequently occupied
only half the time occupied by the first
G, since each of the two occupies an equal
time in passing each A. Thirdly, at the same
moment all the B's have passed all the G's:
for the first G and the first B will simultaneously
reach the opposite ends of the course, since
(so says Zeno) the time occupied by the first
G in passing each of the B's is equal to
that occupied by it in passing each of the
A's, because an equal time is occupied by
both the first B and the first G in passing
all the A's. This is the argument, but it
presupposed the aforesaid fallacious assumption.
Nor in reference to contradictory change
shall we find anything unanswerable in the
argument that if a thing is changing from
not-white, say, to white, and is in neither
condition, then it will be neither white
nor not-white: for the fact that it is not
wholly in either condition will not preclude
us from calling it white or not-white. We
call a thing white or not-white not necessarily
because it is be one or the other, but cause
most of its parts or the most essential parts
of it are so: not being in a certain condition
is different from not being wholly in that
condition. So, too, in the case of being
and not-being and all other conditions which
stand in a contradictory relation: while
the changing thing must of necessity be in
one of the two opposites, it is never wholly
in either.
Again, in the case of circles and spheres
and everything whose motion is confined within
the space that it occupies, it is not true
to say the motion can be nothing but rest,
on the ground that such things in motion,
themselves and their parts, will occupy the
same position for a period of time, and that
therefore they will be at once at rest and
in motion. For in the first place the parts
do not occupy the same position for any period
of time: and in the second place the whole
also is always changing to a different position:
for if we take the orbit as described from
a point A on a circumference, it will not
be the same as the orbit as described from
B or G or any other point on the same circumference
except in an accidental sense, the sense
that is to say in which a musical man is
the same as a man. Thus one orbit is always
changing into another, and the thing will
never be at rest. And it is the same with
the sphere and everything else whose motion
is confined within the space that it occupies.
Part 10
Our next point is that that which is without
parts cannot be in motion except accidentally:
i. e. it can be in motion only in so far
as the body or the magnitude is in motion
and the partless is in motion by inclusion
therein, just as that which is in a boat
may be in motion in consequence of the locomotion
of the boat, or a part may be in motion in
virtue of the motion of the whole. (It must
be remembered, however, that by 'that which
is without parts' I mean that which is quantitatively
indivisible (and that the case of the motion
of a part is not exactly parallel): for parts
have motions belonging essentially and severally
to themselves distinct from the motion of
the whole. The distinction may be seen most
clearly in the case of a revolving sphere,
in which the velocities of the parts near
the centre and of those on the surface are
different from one another and from that
of the whole; this implies that there is
not one motion but many). As we have said,
then, that which is without parts can be
in motion in the sense in which a man sitting
in a boat is in motion when the boat is travelling,
but it cannot be in motion of itself. For
suppose that it is changing from AB to BG-either
from one magnitude to another, or from one
form to another, or from some state to its
contradictory-and let D be the primary time
in which it undergoes the change. Then in
the time in which it is changing it must
be either in AB or in BG or partly in one
and partly in the other: for this, as we
saw, is true of everything that is changing.
Now it cannot be partly in each of the two:
for then it would be divisible into parts.
Nor again can it be in BG: for then it will
have completed the change, whereas the assumption
is that the change is in process. It remains,
then, that in the time in which it is changing,
it is in Ab. That being so, it will be at
rest: for, as we saw, to be in the same condition
for a period of time is to be at rest. So
it is not possible for that which has no
parts to be in motion or to change in any
way: for only one condition could have made
it possible for it to have motion, viz. that
time should be composed of moments, in which
case at any moment it would have completed
a motion or a change, so that it would never
be in motion, but would always have been
in motion. But this we have already shown
above to be impossible: time is not composed
of moments, just as a line is not composed
of points, and motion is not composed of
starts: for this theory simply makes motion
consist of indivisibles in exactly the same
way as time is made to consist of moments
or a length of points.
Again, it may be shown in the following way
that there can be no motion of a point or
of any other indivisible. That which is in
motion can never traverse a space greater
than itself without first traversing a space
equal to or less than itself. That being
so, it is evident that the point also must
first traverse a space equal to or less than
itself. But since it is indivisible, there
can be no space less than itself for it to
traverse first: so it will have to traverse
a distance equal to itself. Thus the line
will be composed of points, for the point,
as it continually traverses a distance equal
to itself, will be a measure of the whole
line. But since this is impossible, it is
likewise impossible for the indivisible to
be in motion.
Again, since motion is always in a period
of time and never in a moment, and all time
is divisible, for everything that is in motion
there must be a time less than that in which
it traverses a distance as great as itself.
For that in which it is in motion will be
a time, because all motion is in a period
of time; and all time has been shown above
to be divisible. Therefore, if a point is
in motion, there must be a time less than
that in which it has itself traversed any
distance. But this is impossible, for in
less time it must traverse less distance,
and thus the indivisible will be divisible
into something less than itself, just as
the time is so divisible: the fact being
that the only condition under which that
which is without parts and indivisible could
be in motion would have been the possibility
of the infinitely small being in motion in
a moment: for in the two questions-that of
motion in a moment and that of motion of
something indivisible-the same principle
is involved.
Our next point is that no process of change
is infinite: for every change, whether between
contradictories or between contraries, is
a change from something to something. Thus
in contradictory changes the positive or
the negative, as the case may be, is the
limit, e. g. being is the limit of coming
to be and not-being is the limit of ceasing
to be: and in contrary changes the particular
contraries are the limits, since these are
the extreme points of any such process of
change, and consequently of every process
of alteration: for alteration is always dependent
upon some contraries. Similarly contraries
are the extreme points of processes of increase
and decrease: the limit of increase is to
be found in the complete magnitude proper
to the peculiar nature of the thing that
is increasing, while the limit of decrease
is the complete loss of such magnitude. Locomotion,
it is true, we cannot show to be finite in
this way, since it is not always between
contraries. But since that which cannot be
cut (in the sense that it is inconceivable
that it should be cut, the term 'cannot'
being used in several senses)-since it is
inconceivable that that which in this sense
cannot be cut should be in process of being
cut, and generally that that which cannot
come to be should be in process of coming
to be, it follows that it is inconceivable
that that which cannot complete a change
should be in process of changing to that
to which it cannot complete a change. If,
then, it is to be assumed that that which
is in locomotion is in process of changing,
it must be capable of completing the change.
Consequently its motion is not infinite,
and it will not be in locomotion over an
infinite distance, for it cannot traverse
such a distance.
It is evident, then, that a process of change
cannot be infinite in the sense that it is
not defined by limits. But it remains to
be considered whether it is possible in the
sense that one and the same process of change
may be infinite in respect of the time which
it occupies. If it is not one process, it
would seem that there is nothing to prevent
its being infinite in this sense; e. g. if
a process of locomotion be succeeded by a
process of alteration and that by a process
of increase and that again by a process of
coming to be: in this way there may be motion
for ever so far as the time is concerned,
but it will not be one motion, because all
these motions do not compose one. If it is
to be one process, no motion can be infinite
in respect of the time that it occupies,
with the single exception of rotatory locomotion.
END OF ARISTOTLE - PHYSICS WEB-PAGE
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