ARISTOTLE
POSTERIOR ANALYTIC
IN TWO WEBPAGE PARTS - PAGE TWO
WRITTEN 350 B. C. E
TRANSLATED BY G. R. G. MURE
|
BOOK II
Part 1
THE kinds of question we ask are as many
as the kinds of things which we know. They
are in fact four:-(1) whether the connexion
of an attribute with a thing is a fact, (2)
what is the reason of the connexion, (3)
whether a thing exists, (4) What is the nature
of the thing. Thus, when our question concerns
a complex of thing and attribute and we ask
whether the thing is thus or otherwise qualified-whether,
e. g. the sun suffers eclipse or not- then
we are asking as to the fact of a connexion.
That our inquiry ceases with the discovery
that the sun does suffer eclipse is an indication
of this; and if we know from the start that
the sun suffers eclipse, we do not inquire
whether it does so or not. On the other hand,
when we know the fact we ask the reason;
as, for example, when we know that the sun
is being eclipsed and that an earthquake
is in progress, it is the reason of eclipse
or earthquake into which we inquire. Where
a complex is concerned, then, those are the
two questions we ask; but for some objects
of inquiry we have a different kind of question
to ask, such as whether there is or is not
a centaur or a God. (By 'is or is not' I
mean 'is or is not, without further qualification';
as opposed to 'is or is not [e. g.] white'.)
On the other hand, when we have ascertained
the thing's existence, we inquire as to its
nature, asking, for instance, 'what, then,
is God?' or 'what is man?'.
2
These, then, are the four kinds of question
we ask, and it is in the answers to these
questions that our knowledge consists. Now
when we ask whether a connexion is a fact,
or whether a thing without qualification
is, we are really asking whether the connexion
or the thing has a 'middle'; and when we
have ascertained either that the connexion
is a fact or that the thing is-i. e. ascertained
either the partial or the unqualified being
of the thing-and are proceeding to ask the
reason of the connexion or the nature of
the thing, then we are asking what the 'middle'
is.
(By distinguishing the fact of the connexion
and the existence of the thing as respectively
the partial and the unqualified being of
the thing, I mean that if we ask 'does the
moon suffer eclipse?', or 'does the moon
wax?', the question concerns a part of the
thing's being; for what we are asking in
such questions is whether a thing is this
or that, i. e. has or has not this or that
attribute: whereas, if we ask whether the
moon or night exists, the question concerns
the unqualified being of a thing.) We conclude
that in all our inquiries we are asking either
whether there is a 'middle' or what the 'middle'
is: for the 'middle' here is precisely the
cause, and it is the cause that we seek in
all our inquiries. Thus, 'Does the moon suffer
eclipse?' means 'Is there or is there not
a cause producing eclipse of the moon?',
and when we have learnt that there is, our
next question is, 'What, then, is this cause?
for the cause through which a thing is-not
is this or that, i. e. has this or that attribute,
but without qualification is-and the cause
through which it is-not is without qualification,
but is this or that as having some essential
attribute or some accident-are both alike
the middle'. By that which is without qualification
I mean the subject, e. g. moon or earth or
sun or triangle; by that which a subject
is (in the partial sense) I mean a property,
e. g. eclipse, equality or inequality, interposition
or non-interposition. For in all these examples
it is clear that the nature of the thing
and the reason of the fact are identical:
the question 'What is eclipse?' and its answer
'The privation of the moon's light by the
interposition of the earth' are identical
with the question 'What is the reason of
eclipse?' or 'Why does the moon suffer eclipse?'
and the reply 'Because of the failure of
light through the earth's shutting it out'.
Again, for 'What is a concord? A commensurate
numerical ratio of a high and a low note',
we may substitute 'What ratio makes a high
and a low note concordant? Their relation
according to a commensurate numerical ratio.'
'Are the high and the low note concordant?'
is equivalent to 'Is their ratio commensurate?';
and when we find that it is commensurate,
we ask 'What, then, is their ratio?'. Cases
in which the 'middle' is sensible show that
the object of our inquiry is always the 'middle':
we inquire, because we have not perceived
it, whether there is or is not a 'middle'
causing, e. g. an eclipse. On the other hand,
if we were on the moon we should not be inquiring
either as to the fact or the reason, but
both fact and reason would be obvious simultaneously.
For the act of perception would have enabled
us to know the universal too; since, the
present fact of an eclipse being evident,
perception would then at the same time give
us the present fact of the earth's screening
the sun's light, and from this would arise
the universal. Thus, as we maintain, to know
a thing's nature is to know the reason why
it is; and this is equally true of things
in so far as they are said without qualification
to he as opposed to being possessed of some
attribute, and in so far as they are said
to be possessed of some attribute such as
equal to right angles, or greater or less.
3
It is clear, then, that all questions are
a search for a 'middle'. Let us now state
how essential nature is revealed and in what
way it can be reduced to demonstration; what
definition is, and what things are definable.
And let us first discuss certain difficulties
which these questions raise, beginning what
we have to say with a point most intimately
connected with our immediately preceding
remarks, namely the doubt that might be felt
as to whether or not it is possible to know
the same thing in the same relation, both
by definition and by demonstration. It might,
I mean, be urged that definition is held
to concern essential nature and is in every
case universal and affirmative; whereas,
on the other hand, some conclusions are negative
and some are not universal; e. g. all in
the second figure are negative, none in the
third are universal. And again, not even
all affirmative conclusions in the first
figure are definable, e. g. 'every triangle
has its angles equal to two right angles'.
An argument proving this difference between
demonstration and definition is that to have
scientific knowledge of the demonstrable
is identical with possessing a demonstration
of it: hence if demonstration of such conclusions
as these is possible, there clearly cannot
also be definition of them. If there could,
one might know such a conclusion also in
virtue of its definition without possessing
the demonstration of it; for there is nothing
to stop our having the one without the other.
Induction too will sufficiently convince
us of this difference; for never yet by defining
anything-essential attribute or accident-did
we get knowledge of it. Again, if to define
is to acquire knowledge of a substance, at
any rate such attributes are not substances.
It is evident, then, that not everything
demonstrable can be defined. What then? Can
everything definable be demonstrated, or
not? There is one of our previous arguments
which covers this too. Of a single thing
qua single there is a single scientific knowledge.
Hence, since to know the demonstrable scientifically
is to possess the demonstration of it, an
impossible consequence will follow:-possession
of its definition without its demonstration
will give knowledge of the demonstrable.
Moreover, the basic premisses of demonstrations
are definitions, and it has already been
shown that these will be found indemonstrable;
either the basic premisses will be demonstrable
and will depend on prior premisses, and the
regress will be endless; or the primary truths
will be indemonstrable definitions. But if
the definable and the demonstrable are not
wholly the same, may they yet be partially
the same? Or is that impossible, because
there can be no demonstration of the definable?
There can be none, because definition is
of the essential nature or being of something,
and all demonstrations evidently posit and
assume the essential nature-mathematical
demonstrations, for example, the nature of
unity and the odd, and all the other sciences
likewise. Moreover, every demonstration proves
a predicate of a subject as attaching or
as not attaching to it, but in definition
one thing is not predicated of another; we
do not, e. g. predicate animal of biped nor
biped of animal, nor yet figure of plane-plane
not being figure nor figure plane. Again,
to prove essential nature is not the same
as to prove the fact of a connexion. Now
definition reveals essential nature, demonstration
reveals that a given attribute attaches or
does not attach to a given subject; but different
things require different demonstrations-unless
the one demonstration is related to the other
as part to whole. I add this because if all
triangles have been proved to possess angles
equal to two right angles, then this attribute
has been proved to attach to isosceles; for
isosceles is a part of which all triangles
constitute the whole. But in the case before
us the fact and the essential nature are
not so related to one another, since the
one is not a part of the other. So it emerges
that not all the definable is demonstrable
nor all the demonstrable definable; and we
may draw the general conclusion that there
is no identical object of which it is possible
to possess both a definition and a demonstration.
It follows obviously that definition and
demonstration are neither identical nor contained
either within the other: if they were, their
objects would be related either as identical
or as whole and part.
4
So much, then, for the first stage of our
problem. The next step is to raise the question
whether syllogism-i. e. demonstration-of
the definable nature is possible or, as our
recent argument assumed, impossible. We might
argue it impossible on the following grounds:-(a)
syllogism proves an attribute of a subject
through the middle term; on the other hand
(b) its definable nature is both 'peculiar'
to a subject and predicated of it as belonging
to its essence. But in that case (1) the
subject, its definition, and the middle term
connecting them must be reciprocally predicable
of one another; for if A is to C, obviously
A is 'peculiar' to B and B to C-in fact all
three terms are 'peculiar' to one another:
and further (2) if A inheres in the essence
of all B and B is predicated universally
of all C as belonging to C's essence, A also
must be predicated of C as belonging to its
essence. If one does not take this relation
as thus duplicated-if, that is, A is predicated
as being of the essence of B, but B is not
of the essence of the subjects of which it
is predicated-A will not necessarily be predicated
of C as belonging to its essence. So both
premisses will predicate essence, and consequently
B also will be predicated of C as its essence.
Since, therefore, both premisses do predicate
essence-i. e. definable form- C's definable
form will appear in the middle term before
the conclusion is drawn. We may generalize
by supposing that it is possible to prove
the essential nature of man. Let C be man,
A man's essential nature - two-footed animal,
or aught else it may be. Then, if we are
to syllogize, A must be predicated of all
B. But this premiss will be mediated by a
fresh definition, which consequently will
also be the essential nature of man. Therefore
the argument assumes what it has to prove,
since B too is the essential nature of man.
It is, however, the case in which there are
only the two premisses-i. e. in which the
premisses are primary and immediate-which
we ought to investigate, because it best
illustrates the point under discussion. Thus
they who prove the essential nature of soul
or man or anything else through reciprocating
terms beg the question. It would be begging
the question, for example, to contend that
the soul is that which causes its own life,
and that what causes its own life is a self-moving
number; for one would have to postulate that
the soul is a self-moving number in the sense
of being identical with it. For if A is predicable
as a mere consequent of B and B of C, A will
not on that account be the definable form
of C: A will merely be what it was true to
say of C. Even if A is predicated of all
B inasmuch as B is identical with a species
of A, still it will not follow: being an
animal is predicated of being a man-since
it is true that in all instances to be human
is to be animal, just as it is also true
that every man is an animal-but not as identical
with being man. We conclude, then, that unless
one takes both the premisses as predicating
essence, one cannot infer that A is the definable
form and essence of C: but if one does so
take them, in assuming B one will have assumed,
before drawing the conclusion, what the definable
form of C is; so that there has been no inference,
for one has begged the question.
5
Nor, as was said in my formal logic, is the
method of division a process of inference
at all, since at no point does the characterization
of the subject follow necessarily from the
premising of certain other facts: division
demonstrates as little as does induction.
For in a genuine demonstration the conclusion
must not be put as a question nor depend
on a concession, but must follow necessarily
from its premisses, even if the respondent
deny it. The definer asks 'Is man animal
or inanimate?' and then assumes-he has not
inferred-that man is animal. Next, when presented
with an exhaustive division of animal into
terrestrial and aquatic, he assumes that
man is terrestrial. Moreover, that man is
the complete formula, terrestrial-animal,
does not follow necessarily from the premisses:
this too is an assumption, and equally an
assumption whether the division comprises
many differentiae or few. (Indeed as this
method of division is used by those who proceed
by it, even truths that can be inferred actually
fail to appear as such.) For why should not
the whole of this formula be true of man,
and yet not exhibit his essential nature
or definable form? Again, what guarantee
is there against an unessential addition,
or against the omission of the final or of
an intermediate determinant of the substantial
being? The champion of division might here
urge that though these lapses do occur, yet
we can solve that difficulty if all the attributes
we assume are constituents of the definable
form, and if, postulating the genus, we produce
by division the requisite uninterrupted sequence
of terms, and omit nothing; and that indeed
we cannot fail to fulfil these conditions
if what is to be divided falls whole into
the division at each stage, and none of it
is omitted; and that this-the dividendum-must
without further question be (ultimately)
incapable of fresh specific division. Nevertheless,
we reply, division does not involve inference;
if it gives knowledge, it gives it in another
way. Nor is there any absurdity in this:
induction, perhaps, is not demonstration
any more than is division, et it does make
evident some truth. Yet to state a definition
reached by division is not to state a conclusion:
as, when conclusions are drawn without their
appropriate middles, the alleged necessity
by which the inference follows from the premisses
is open to a question as to the reason for
it, so definitions reached by division invite
the same question. Thus to the question 'What
is the essential nature of man?' the divider
replies 'Animal, mortal, footed, biped, wingless';
and when at each step he is asked 'Why?',
he will say, and, as he thinks, proves by
division, that all animal is mortal or immortal:
but such a formula taken in its entirety
is not definition; so that even if division
does demonstrate its formula, definition
at any rate does not turn out to be a conclusion
of inference.
6
Can we nevertheless actually demonstrate
what a thing essentially and substantially
is, but hypothetically, i. e. by premising
(1) that its definable form is constituted
by the 'peculiar' attributes of its essential
nature; (2) that such and such are the only
attributes of its essential nature, and that
the complete synthesis of them is peculiar
to the thing; and thus-since in this synthesis
consists the being of the thing-obtaining
our conclusion? Or is the truth that, since
proof must be through the middle term, the
definable form is once more assumed in this
minor premiss too? Further, just as in syllogizing
we do not premise what syllogistic inference
is (since the premisses from which we conclude
must be related as whole and part), so the
definable form must not fall within the syllogism
but remain outside the premisses posited.
It is only against a doubt as to its having
been a syllogistic inference at all that
we have to defend our argument as conforming
to the definition of syllogism. It is only
when some one doubts whether the conclusion
proved is the definable form that we have
to defend it as conforming to the definition
of definable form which we assumed. Hence
syllogistic inference must be possible even
without the express statement of what syllogism
is or what definable form is. The following
type of hypothetical proof also begs the
question. If evil is definable as the divisible,
and the definition of a thing's contrary-if
it has one the contrary of the thing's definition;
then, if good is the contrary of evil and
the indivisible of the divisible, we conclude
that to be good is essentially to be indivisible.
The question is begged because definable
form is assumed as a premiss, and as a premiss
which is to prove definable form. 'But not
the same definable form', you may object.
That I admit, for in demonstrations also
we premise that 'this' is predicable of 'that';
but in this premiss the term we assert of
the minor is neither the major itself nor
a term identical in definition, or convertible,
with the major. Again, both proof by division
and the syllogism just described are open
to the question why man should be animal-biped-terrestrial
and not merely animal and terrestrial, since
what they premise does not ensure that the
predicates shall constitute a genuine unity
and not merely belong to a single subject
as do musical and grammatical when predicated
of the same man.
7
How then by definition shall we prove substance
or essential nature? We cannot show it as
a fresh fact necessarily following from the
assumption of premisses admitted to be facts-the
method of demonstration: we may not proceed
as by induction to establish a universal
on the evidence of groups of particulars
which offer no exception, because induction
proves not what the essential nature of a
thing is but that it has or has not some
attribute. Therefore, since presumably one
cannot prove essential nature by an appeal
to sense perception or by pointing with the
finger, what other method remains? To put
it another way: how shall we by definition
prove essential nature? He who knows what
human-or any other-nature is, must know also
that man exists; for no one knows the nature
of what does not exist-one can know the meaning
of the phrase or name 'goat-stag' but not
what the essential nature of a goat-stag
is. But further, if definition can prove
what is the essential nature of a thing,
can it also prove that it exists? And how
will it prove them both by the same process,
since definition exhibits one single thing
and demonstration another single thing, and
what human nature is and the fact that man
exists are not the same thing? Then too we
hold that it is by demonstration that the
being of everything must be proved-unless
indeed to be were its essence; and, since
being is not a genus, it is not the essence
of anything. Hence the being of anything
as fact is matter for demonstration; and
this is the actual procedure of the sciences,
for the geometer assumes the meaning of the
word triangle, but that it is possessed of
some attribute he proves. What is it, then,
that we shall prove in defining essential
nature? Triangle? In that case a man will
know by definition what a thing's nature
is without knowing whether it exists. But
that is impossible. Moreover it is clear,
if we consider the methods of defining actually
in use, that definition does not prove that
the thing defined exists: since even if there
does actually exist something which is equidistant
from a centre, yet why should the thing named
in the definition exist? Why, in other words,
should this be the formula defining circle?
One might equally well call it the definition
of mountain copper. For definitions do not
carry a further guarantee that the thing
defined can exist or that it is what they
claim to define: one can always ask why.
Since, therefore, to define is to prove either
a thing's essential nature or the meaning
of its name, we may conclude that definition,
if it in no sense proves essential nature,
is a set of words signifying precisely what
a name signifies. But that were a strange
consequence; for (1) both what is not substance
and what does not exist at all would be definable,
since even non-existents can be signified
by a name: (2) all sets of words or sentences
would be definitions, since any kind of sentence
could be given a name; so that we should
all be talking in definitions, and even the
Iliad would be a definition: (3) no demonstration
can prove that any particular name means
any particular thing: neither, therefore,
do definitions, in addition to revealing
the meaning of a name, also reveal that the
name has this meaning. It appears then from
these considerations that neither definition
and syllogism nor their objects are identical,
and further that definition neither demonstrates
nor proves anything, and that knowledge of
essential nature is not to be obtained either
by definition or by demonstration.
8
We must now start afresh and consider which
of these conclusions are sound and which
are not, and what is the nature of definition,
and whether essential nature is in any sense
demonstrable and definable or in none. Now
to know its essential nature is, as we said,
the same as to know the cause of a thing's
existence, and the proof of this depends
on the fact that a thing must have a cause.
Moreover, this cause is either identical
with the essential nature of the thing or
distinct from it; and if its cause is distinct
from it, the essential nature of the thing
is either demonstrable or indemonstrable.
Consequently, if the cause is distinct from
the thing's essential nature and demonstration
is possible, the cause must be the middle
term, and, the conclusion proved being universal
and affirmative, the proof is in the first
figure. So the method just examined of proving
it through another essential nature would
be one way of proving essential nature, because
a conclusion containing essential nature
must be inferred through a middle which is
an essential nature just as a 'peculiar'
property must be inferred through a middle
which is a 'peculiar' property; so that of
the two definable natures of a single thing
this method will prove one and not the other.
Now it was said before that this method could
not amount to demonstration of essential
nature-it is actually a dialectical proof
of it-so let us begin again and explain by
what method it can be demonstrated. When
we are aware of a fact we seek its reason,
and though sometimes the fact and the reason
dawn on us simultaneously, yet we cannot
apprehend the reason a moment sooner than
the fact; and clearly in just the same way
we cannot apprehend a thing's definable form
without apprehending that it exists, since
while we are ignorant whether it exists we
cannot know its essential nature. Moreover
we are aware whether a thing exists or not
sometimes through apprehending an element
in its character, and sometimes accidentally,
as, for example, when we are aware of thunder
as a noise in the clouds, of eclipse as a
privation of light, or of man as some species
of animal, or of the soul as a self-moving
thing. As often as we have accidental knowledge
that the thing exists, we must be in a wholly
negative state as regards awareness of its
essential nature; for we have not got genuine
knowledge even of its existence, and to search
for a thing's essential nature when we are
unaware that it exists is to search for nothing.
On the other hand, whenever we apprehend
an element in the thing's character there
is less difficulty. Thus it follows that
the degree of our knowledge of a thing's
essential nature is determined by the sense
in which we are aware that it exists. Let
us then take the following as our first instance
of being aware of an element in the essential
nature. Let A be eclipse, C the moon, B the
earth's acting as a screen. Now to ask whether
the moon is eclipsed or not is to ask whether
or not B has occurred. But that is precisely
the same as asking whether A has a defining
condition; and if this condition actually
exists, we assert that A also actually exists.
Or again we may ask which side of a contradiction
the defining condition necessitates: does
it make the angles of a triangle equal or
not equal to two right angles? When we have
found the answer, if the premisses are immediate,
we know fact and reason together; if they
are not immediate, we know the fact without
the reason, as in the following example:
let C be the moon, A eclipse, B the fact
that the moon fails to produce shadows though
she is full and though no visible body intervenes
between us and her. Then if B, failure to
produce shadows in spite of the absence of
an intervening body, is attributable A to
C, and eclipse, is attributable to B, it
is clear that the moon is eclipsed, but the
reason why is not yet clear, and we know
that eclipse exists, but we do not know what
its essential nature is. But when it is clear
that A is attributable to C and we proceed
to ask the reason of this fact, we are inquiring
what is the nature of B: is it the earth's
acting as a screen, or the moon's rotation
or her extinction? But B is the definition
of the other term, viz. in these examples,
of the major term A; for eclipse is constituted
by the earth acting as a screen. Thus, (1)
'What is thunder?' 'The quenching of fire
in cloud', and (2) 'Why does it thunder?'
'Because fire is quenched in the cloud',
are equivalent. Let C be cloud, A thunder,
B the quenching of fire. Then B is attributable
to C, cloud, since fire is quenched in it;
and A, noise, is attributable to B; and B
is assuredly the definition of the major
term A. If there be a further mediating cause
of B, it will be one of the remaining partial
definitions of A. We have stated then how
essential nature is discovered and becomes
known, and we see that, while there is no
syllogism-i. e. no demonstrative syllogism-of
essential nature, yet it is through syllogism,
viz. demonstrative syllogism, that essential
nature is exhibited. So we conclude that
neither can the essential nature of anything
which has a cause distinct from itself be
known without demonstration, nor can it be
demonstrated; and this is what we contended
in our preliminary discussions.
9
Now while some things have a cause distinct
from themselves, others have not. Hence it
is evident that there are essential natures
which are immediate, that is are basic premisses;
and of these not only that they are but also
what they are must be assumed or revealed
in some other way. This too is the actual
procedure of the arithmetician, who assumes
both the nature and the existence of unit.
On the other hand, it is possible (in the
manner explained) to exhibit through demonstration
the essential nature of things which have
a 'middle', i. e. a cause of their substantial
being other than that being itself; but we
do not thereby demonstrate it.
10
Since definition is said to be the statement
of a thing's nature, obviously one kind of
definition will be a statement of the meaning
of the name, or of an equivalent nominal
formula. A definition in this sense tells
you, e. g. the meaning of the phrase 'triangular
character'. When we are aware that triangle
exists, we inquire the reason why it exists.
But it is difficult thus to learn the definition
of things the existence of which we do not
genuinely know-the cause of this difficulty
being, as we said before, that we only know
accidentally whether or not the thing exists.
Moreover, a statement may be a unity in either
of two ways, by conjunction, like the Iliad,
or because it exhibits a single predicate
as inhering not accidentally in a single
subject. That then is one way of defining
definition. Another kind of definition is
a formula exhibiting the cause of a thing's
existence. Thus the former signifies without
proving, but the latter will clearly be a
quasi-demonstration of essential nature,
differing from demonstration in the arrangement
of its terms. For there is a difference between
stating why it thunders, and stating what
is the essential nature of thunder; since
the first statement will be 'Because fire
is quenched in the clouds', while the statement
of what the nature of thunder is will be
'The noise of fire being quenched in the
clouds'. Thus the same statement takes a
different form: in one form it is continuous
demonstration, in the other definition. Again,
thunder can be defined as noise in the clouds,
which is the conclusion of the demonstration
embodying essential nature. On the other
hand the definition of immediates is an indemonstrable
positing of essential nature. We conclude
then that definition is (a) an indemonstrable
statement of essential nature, or (b) a syllogism
of essential nature differing from demonstration
in grammatical form, or (c) the conclusion
of a demonstration giving essential nature.
Our discussion has therefore made plain (1)
in what sense and of what things the essential
nature is demonstrable, and in what sense
and of what things it is not; (2) what are
the various meanings of the term definition,
and in what sense and of what things it proves
the essential nature, and in what sense and
of what things it does not; (3) what is the
relation of definition to demonstration,
and how far the same thing is both definable
and demonstrable and how far it is not.
11
We think we have scientific knowledge when
we know the cause, and there are four causes:
(1) the definable form, (2) an antecedent
which necessitates a consequent, (3) the
efficient cause, (4) the final cause. Hence
each of these can be the middle term of a
proof, for (a) though the inference from
antecedent to necessary consequent does not
hold if only one premiss is assumed-two is
the minimum-still when there are two it holds
on condition that they have a single common
middle term. So it is from the assumption
of this single middle term that the conclusion
follows necessarily. The following example
will also show this. Why is the angle in
a semicircle a right angle?-or from what
assumption does it follow that it is a right
angle? Thus, let A be right angle, B the
half of two right angles, C the angle in
a semicircle. Then B is the cause in virtue
of which A, right angle, is attributable
to C, the angle in a semicircle, since B=A
and the other, viz. C,=B, for C is half of
two right angles. Therefore it is the assumption
of B, the half of two right angles, from
which it follows that A is attributable to
C, i. e. that the angle in a semicircle is
a right angle. Moreover, B is identical with
(b) the defining form of A, since it is what
A's definition signifies. Moreover, the formal
cause has already been shown to be the middle.
(c) 'Why did the Athenians become involved
in the Persian war?' means 'What cause originated
the waging of war against the Athenians?'
and the answer is, 'Because they raided Sardis
with the Eretrians', since this originated
the war. Let A be war, B unprovoked raiding,
C the Athenians. Then B, unprovoked raiding,
is true of C, the Athenians, and A is true
of B, since men make war on the unjust aggressor.
So A, having war waged upon them, is true
of B, the initial aggressors, and B is true
of C, the Athenians, who were the aggressors.
Hence here too the cause-in this case the
efficient cause-is the middle term. (d) This
is no less true where the cause is the final
cause. E. g. why does one take a walk after
supper? For the sake of one's health. Why
does a house exist? For the preservation
of one's goods. The end in view is in the
one case health, in the other preservation.
To ask the reason why one must walk after
supper is precisely to ask to what end one
must do it. Let C be walking after supper,
B the non-regurgitation of food, A health.
Then let walking after supper possess the
property of preventing food from rising to
the orifice of the stomach, and let this
condition be healthy; since it seems that
B, the non-regurgitation of food, is attributable
to C, taking a walk, and that A, health,
is attributable to B. What, then, is the
cause through which A, the final cause, inheres
in C? It is B, the non-regurgitation of food;
but B is a kind of definition of A, for A
will be explained by it. Why is B the cause
of A's belonging to C? Because to be in a
condition such as B is to be in health. The
definitions must be transposed, and then
the detail will become clearer. Incidentally,
here the order of coming to be is the reverse
of what it is in proof through the efficient
cause: in the efficient order the middle
term must come to be first, whereas in the
teleological order the minor, C, must first
take place, and the end in view comes last
in time. The same thing may exist for an
end and be necessitated as well. For example,
light shines through a lantern (1) because
that which consists of relatively small particles
necessarily passes through pores larger than
those particles-assuming that light does
issue by penetrationand (2) for an end, namely
to save us from stumbling. If then, a thing
can exist through two causes, can it come
to be through two causes-as for instance
if thunder be a hiss and a roar necessarily
produced by the quenching of fire, and also
designed, as the Pythagoreans say, for a
threat to terrify those that lie in Tartarus?
Indeed, there are very many such cases, mostly
among the processes and products of the natural
world; for nature, in different senses of
the term 'nature', produces now for an end,
now by necessity. Necessity too is of two
kinds. It may work in accordance with a thing's
natural tendency, or by constraint and in
opposition to it; as, for instance, by necessity
a stone is borne both upwards and downwards,
but not by the same necessity. Of the products
of man's intelligence some are never due
to chance or necessity but always to an end,
as for example a house or a statue; others,
such as health or safety, may result from
chance as well. It is mostly in cases where
the issue is indeterminate (though only where
the production does not originate in chance,
and the end is consequently good), that a
result is due to an end, and this is true
alike in nature or in art. By chance, on
the other hand, nothing comes to be for an
end.
12
The effect may be still coming to be, or
its occurrence may be past or future, yet
the cause will be the same as when it is
actually existent-for it is the middle which
is the cause-except that if the effect actually
exists the cause is actually existent, if
it is coming to be so is the cause, if its
occurrence is past the cause is past, if
future the cause is future. For example,
the moon was eclipsed because the earth intervened,
is becoming eclipsed because the earth is
in process of intervening, will be eclipsed
because the earth will intervene, is eclipsed
because the earth intervenes. To take a second
example: assuming that the definition of
ice is solidified water, let C be water,
A solidified, B the middle, which is the
cause, namely total failure of heat. Then
B is attributed to C, and A, solidification,
to B: ice when B is occurring, has formed
when B has occurred, and will form when B
shall occur. This sort of cause, then, and
its effect come to be simultaneously when
they are in process of becoming, and exist
simultaneously when they actually exist;
and the same holds good when they are past
and when they are future. But what of cases
where they are not simultaneous? Can causes
and effects different from one another form,
as they seem to us to form, a continuous
succession, a past effect resulting from
a past cause different from itself, a future
effect from a future cause different from
it, and an effect which is coming-to-be from
a cause different from and prior to it? Now
on this theory it is from the posterior event
that we reason (and this though these later
events actually have their source of origin
in previous events - a fact which shows that
also when the effect is coming-to-be we still
reason from the posterior event), and from
the event we cannot reason (we cannot argue
that because an event A has occurred, therefore
an event B has occurred subsequently to A
but still in the past-and the same holds
good if the occurrence is future)-cannot
reason because, be the time interval definite
or indefinite, it will never be possible
to infer that because it is true to say that
A occurred, therefore it is true to say that
B, the subsequent event, occurred; for in
the interval between the events, though A
has already occurred, the latter statement
will be false. And the same argument applies
also to future events; i. e. one cannot infer
from an event which occurred in the past
that a future event will occur. The reason
of this is that the middle must be homogeneous,
past when the extremes are past, future when
they are future, coming to be when they are
coming-to-be, actually existent when they
are actually existent; and there cannot be
a middle term homogeneous with extremes respectively
past and future. And it is a further difficulty
in this theory that the time interval can
be neither indefinite nor definite, since
during it the inference will be false. We
have also to inquire what it is that holds
events together so that the coming-to-be
now occurring in actual things follows upon
a past event. It is evident, we may suggest,
that a past event and a present process cannot
be 'contiguous', for not even two past events
can be 'contiguous'. For past events are
limits and atomic; so just as points are
not 'contiguous' neither are past events,
since both are indivisible. For the same
reason a past event and a present process
cannot be 'contiguous', for the process is
divisible, the event indivisible. Thus the
relation of present process to past event
is analogous to that of line to point, since
a process contains an infinity of past events.
These questions, however, must receive a
more explicit treatment in our general theory
of change. The following must suffice as
an account of the manner in which the middle
would be identical with the cause on the
supposition that coming-to-be is a series
of consecutive events: for in the terms of
such a series too the middle and major terms
must form an immediate premiss; e. g. we
argue that, since C has occurred, therefore
A occurred: and C's occurrence was posterior,
A's prior; but C is the source of the inference
because it is nearer to the present moment,
and the starting-point of time is the present.
We next argue that, since D has occurred,
therefore C occurred. Then we conclude that,
since D has occurred, therefore A must have
occurred; and the cause is C, for since D
has occurred C must have occurred, and since
C has occurred A must previously have occurred.
If we get our middle term in this way, will
the series terminate in an immediate premiss,
or since, as we said, no two events are 'contiguous',
will a fresh middle term always intervene
because there is an infinity of middles?
No: though no two events are 'contiguous',
yet we must start from a premiss consisting
of a middle and the present event as major.
The like is true of future events too, since
if it is true to say that D will exist, it
must be a prior truth to say that A will
exist, and the cause of this conclusion is
C; for if D will exist, C will exist prior
to D, and if C will exist, A will exist prior
to it. And here too the same infinite divisibility
might be urged, since future events are not
'contiguous'. But here too an immediate basic
premiss must be assumed. And in the world
of fact this is so: if a house has been built,
then blocks must have been quarried and shaped.
The reason is that a house having been built
necessitates a foundation having been laid,
and if a foundation has been laid blocks
must have been shaped beforehand. Again,
if a house will be built, blocks will similarly
be shaped beforehand; and proof is through
the middle in the same way, for the foundation
will exist before the house. Now we observe
in Nature a certain kind of circular process
of coming-to-be; and this is possible only
if the middle and extreme terms are reciprocal,
since conversion is conditioned by reciprocity
in the terms of the proof. This-the convertibility
of conclusions and premisses-has been proved
in our early chapters, and the circular process
is an instance of this. In actual fact it
is exemplified thus: when the earth had been
moistened an exhalation was bound to rise,
and when an exhalation had risen cloud was
bound to form, and from the formation of
cloud rain necessarily resulted and by the
fall of rain the earth was necessarily moistened:
but this was the starting-point, so that
a circle is completed; for posit any one
of the terms and another follows from it,
and from that another, and from that again
the first. Some occurrences are universal
(for they are, or come-to-be what they are,
always and in ever case); others again are
not always what they are but only as a general
rule: for instance, not every man can grow
a beard, but it is the general rule. In the
case of such connexions the middle term too
must be a general rule. For if A is predicated
universally of B and B of C, A too must be
predicated always and in every instance of
C, since to hold in every instance and always
is of the nature of the universal. But we
have assumed a connexion which is a general
rule; consequently the middle term B must
also be a general rule. So connexions which
embody a general rule-i. e. which exist or
come to be as a general rule-will also derive
from immediate basic premisses.
13
We have already explained how essential nature
is set out in the terms of a demonstration,
and the sense in which it is or is not demonstrable
or definable; so let us now discuss the method
to be adopted in tracing the elements predicated
as constituting the definable form. Now of
the attributes which inhere always in each
several thing there are some which are wider
in extent than it but not wider than its
genus (by attributes of wider extent mean
all such as are universal attributes of each
several subject, but in their application
are not confined to that subject). while
an attribute may inhere in every triad, yet
also in a subject not a triad-as being inheres
in triad but also in subjects not numbers
at all-odd on the other hand is an attribute
inhering in every triad and of wider application
(inhering as it does also in pentad), but
which does not extend beyond the genus of
triad; for pentad is a number, but nothing
outside number is odd. It is such attributes
which we have to select, up to the exact
point at which they are severally of wider
extent than the subject but collectively
coextensive with it; for this synthesis must
be the substance of the thing. For example
every triad possesses the attributes number,
odd, and prime in both senses, i. e. not
only as possessing no divisors, but also
as not being a sum of numbers. This, then,
is precisely what triad is, viz. a number,
odd, and prime in the former and also the
latter sense of the term: for these attributes
taken severally apply, the first two to all
odd numbers, the last to the dyad also as
well as to the triad, but, taken collectively,
to no other subject. Now since we have shown
above' that attributes predicated as belonging
to the essential nature are necessary and
that universals are necessary, and since
the attributes which we select as inhering
in triad, or in any other subject whose attributes
we select in this way, are predicated as
belonging to its essential nature, triad
will thus possess these attributes necessarily.
Further, that the synthesis of them constitutes
the substance of triad is shown by the following
argument. If it is not identical with the
being of triad, it must be related to triad
as a genus named or nameless. It will then
be of wider extent than triad-assuming that
wider potential extent is the character of
a genus. If on the other hand this synthesis
is applicable to no subject other than the
individual triads, it will be identical with
the being of triad, because we make the further
assumption that the substance of each subject
is the predication of elements in its essential
nature down to the last differentia characterizing
the individuals. It follows that any other
synthesis thus exhibited will likewise be
identical with the being of the subject.
The author of a hand-book on a subject that
is a generic whole should divide the genus
into its first infimae species-number e.
g. into triad and dyad-and then endeavour
to seize their definitions by the method
we have described-the definition, for example,
of straight line or circle or right angle.
After that, having established what the category
is to which the subaltern genus belongs-quantity
or quality, for instance-he should examine
the properties 'peculiar' to the species,
working through the proximate common differentiae.
He should proceed thus because the attributes
of the genera compounded of the infimae species
will be clearly given by the definitions
of the species; since the basic element of
them all is the definition, i. e. the simple
infirma species, and the attributes inhere
essentially in the simple infimae species,
in the genera only in virtue of these. Divisions
according to differentiae are a useful accessory
to this method. What force they have as proofs
we did, indeed, explain above, but that merely
towards collecting the essential nature they
may be of use we will proceed to show. They
might, indeed, seem to be of no use at all,
but rather to assume everything at the start
and to be no better than an initial assumption
made without division. But, in fact, the
order in which the attributes are predicated
does make a difference - it matters whether
we say animal-tame-biped, or biped-animal-tame.
For if every definable thing consists of
two elements and 'animal-tame' forms a unity,
and again out of this and the further differentia
man (or whatever else is the unity under
construction) is constituted, then the elements
we assume have necessarily been reached by
division. Again, division is the only possible
method of avoiding the omission of any element
of the essential nature. Thus, if the primary
genus is assumed and we then take one of
the lower divisions, the dividendum will
not fall whole into this division: e. g.
it is not all animal which is either whole-winged
or split-winged but all winged animal, for
it is winged animal to which this differentiation
belongs. The primary differentiation of animal
is that within which all animal falls. The
like is true of every other genus, whether
outside animal or a subaltern genus of animal;
e. g. the primary differentiation of bird
is that within which falls every bird, of
fish that within which falls every fish.
So, if we proceed in this way, we can be
sure that nothing has been omitted: by any
other method one is bound to omit something
without knowing it. To define and divide
one need not know the whole of existence.
Yet some hold it impossible to know the differentiae
distinguishing each thing from every single
other thing without knowing every single
other thing; and one cannot, they say, know
each thing without knowing its differentiae,
since everything is identical with that from
which it does not differ, and other than
that from which it differs. Now first of
all this is a fallacy: not every differentia
precludes identity, since many differentiae
inhere in things specifically identical,
though not in the substance of these nor
essentially. Secondly, when one has taken
one's differing pair of opposites and assumed
that the two sides exhaust the genus, and
that the subject one seeks to define is present
in one or other of them, and one has further
verified its presence in one of them; then
it does not matter whether or not one knows
all the other subjects of which the differentiae
are also predicated. For it is obvious that
when by this process one reaches subjects
incapable of further differentiation one
will possess the formula defining the substance.
Moreover, to postulate that the division
exhausts the genus is not illegitimate if
the opposites exclude a middle; since if
it is the differentia of that genus, anything
contained in the genus must lie on one of
the two sides. In establishing a definition
by division one should keep three objects
in view: (1) the admission only of elements
in the definable form, (2) the arrangement
of these in the right order, (3) the omission
of no such elements. The first is feasible
because one can establish genus and differentia
through the topic of the genus, just as one
can conclude the inherence of an accident
through the topic of the accident. The right
order will be achieved if the right term
is assumed as primary, and this will be ensured
if the term selected is predicable of all
the others but not all they of it; since
there must be one such term. Having assumed
this we at once proceed in the same way with
the lower terms; for our second term will
be the first of the remainder, our third
the first of those which follow the second
in a 'contiguous' series, since when the
higher term is excluded, that term of the
remainder which is 'contiguous' to it will
be primary, and so on. Our procedure makes
it clear that no elements in the definable
form have been omitted: we have taken the
differentia that comes first in the order
of division, pointing out that animal, e.
g. is divisible exhaustively into A and B,
and that the subject accepts one of the two
as its predicate. Next we have taken the
differentia of the whole thus reached, and
shown that the whole we finally reach is
not further divisible-i. e. that as soon
as we have taken the last differentia to
form the concrete totality, this totality
admits of no division into species. For it
is clear that there is no superfluous addition,
since all these terms we have selected are
elements in the definable form; and nothing
lacking, since any omission would have to
be a genus or a differentia. Now the primary
term is a genus, and this term taken in conjunction
with its differentiae is a genus: moreover
the differentiae are all included, because
there is now no further differentia; if there
were, the final concrete would admit of division
into species, which, we said, is not the
case. To resume our account of the right
method of investigation: We must start by
observing a set of similar-i. e. specifically
identical-individuals, and consider what
element they have in common. We must then
apply the same process to another set of
individuals which belong to one species and
are generically but not specifically identical
with the former set. When we have established
what the common element is in all members
of this second species, and likewise in members
of further species, we should again consider
whether the results established possess any
identity, and persevere until we reach a
single formula, since this will be the definition
of the thing. But if we reach not one formula
but two or more, evidently the definiendum
cannot be one thing but must be more than
one. I may illustrate my meaning as follows.
If we were inquiring what the essential nature
of pride is, we should examine instances
of proud men we know of to see what, as such,
they have in common; e. g. if Alcibiades
was proud, or Achilles and Ajax were proud,
we should find on inquiring what they all
had in common, that it was intolerance of
insult; it was this which drove Alcibiades
to war, Achilles wrath, and Ajax to suicide.
We should next examine other cases, Lysander,
for example, or Socrates, and then if these
have in common indifference alike to good
and ill fortune, I take these two results
and inquire what common element have equanimity
amid the vicissitudes of life and impatience
of dishonour. If they have none, there will
be two genera of pride. Besides, every definition
is always universal and commensurate: the
physician does not prescribe what is healthy
for a single eye, but for all eyes or for
a determinate species of eye. It is also
easier by this method to define the single
species than the universal, and that is why
our procedure should be from the several
species to the universal genera-this for
the further reason too that equivocation
is less readily detected in genera than in
infimae species. Indeed, perspicuity is essential
in definitions, just as inferential movement
is the minimum required in demonstrations;
and we shall attain perspicuity if we can
collect separately the definition of each
species through the group of singulars which
we have established e. g. the definition
of similarity not unqualified but restricted
to colours and to figures; the definition
of acuteness, but only of sound-and so proceed
to the common universal with a careful avoidance
of equivocation. We may add that if dialectical
disputation must not employ metaphors, clearly
metaphors and metaphorical expressions are
precluded in definition: otherwise dialectic
would involve metaphors.
14
In order to formulate the connexions we wish
to prove we have to select our analyses and
divisions. The method of selection consists
in laying down the common genus of all our
subjects of investigation-if e. g. they are
animals, we lay down what the properties
are which inhere in every animal. These established,
we next lay down the properties essentially
connected with the first of the remaining
classes-e. g. if this first subgenus is bird,
the essential properties of every bird-and
so on, always characterizing the proximate
subgenus. This will clearly at once enable
us to say in virtue of what character the
subgenera-man, e. g. or horse-possess their
properties. Let A be animal, B the properties
of every animal, C D E various species of
animal. Then it is clear in virtue of what
character B inheres in D-namely A-and that
it inheres in C and E for the same reason:
and throughout the remaining subgenera always
the same rule applies. We are now taking
our examples from the traditional class-names,
but we must not confine ourselves to considering
these. We must collect any other common character
which we observe, and then consider with
what species it is connected and what. properties
belong to it. For example, as the common
properties of horned animals we collect the
possession of a third stomach and only one
row of teeth. Then since it is clear in virtue
of what character they possess these attributes-namely
their horned character-the next question
is, to what species does the possession of
horns attach? Yet a further method of selection
is by analogy: for we cannot find a single
identical name to give to a squid's pounce,
a fish's spine, and an animal's bone, although
these too possess common properties as if
there were a single osseous nature.
15
Some connexions that require proof are identical
in that they possess an identical 'middle'
e. g. a whole group might be proved through
'reciprocal replacement'-and of these one
class are identical in genus, namely all
those whose difference consists in their
concerning different subjects or in their
mode of manifestation. This latter class
may be exemplified by the questions as to
the causes respectively of echo, of reflection,
and of the rainbow: the connexions to be
proved which these questions embody are identical
generically, because all three are forms
of repercussion; but specifically they are
different. Other connexions that require
proof only differ in that the 'middle' of
the one is subordinate to the 'middle' of
the other. For example: Why does the Nile
rise towards the end of the month? Because
towards its close the month is more stormy.
Why is the month more stormy towards its
close? Because the moon is waning. Here the
one cause is subordinate to the other.
16
The question might be raised with regard
to cause and effect whether when the effect
is present the cause also is present; whether,
for instance, if a plant sheds its leaves
or the moon is eclipsed, there is present
also the cause of the eclipse or of the fall
of the leaves-the possession of broad leaves,
let us say, in the latter case, in the former
the earth's interposition. For, one might
argue, if this cause is not present, these
phenomena will have some other cause: if
it is present, its effect will be at once
implied by it-the eclipse by the earth's
interposition, the fall of the leaves by
the possession of broad leaves; but if so,
they will be logically coincident and each
capable of proof through the other. Let me
illustrate: Let A be deciduous character,
B the possession of broad leaves, C vine.
Now if A inheres in B (for every broad-leaved
plant is deciduous), and B in C (every vine
possessing broad leaves); then A inheres
in C (every vine is deciduous), and the middle
term B is the cause. But we can also demonstrate
that the vine has broad leaves because it
is deciduous. Thus, let D be broad-leaved,
E deciduous, F vine. Then E inheres in F
(since every vine is deciduous), and D in
E (for every deciduous plant has broad leaves):
therefore every vine has broad leaves, and
the cause is its deciduous character. If,
however, they cannot each be the cause of
the other (for cause is prior to effect,
and the earth's interposition is the cause
of the moon's eclipse and not the eclipse
of the interposition)-if, then, demonstration
through the cause is of the reasoned fact
and demonstration not through the cause is
of the bare fact, one who knows it through
the eclipse knows the fact of the earth's
interposition but not the reasoned fact.
Moreover, that the eclipse is not the cause
of the interposition, but the interposition
of the eclipse, is obvious because the interposition
is an element in the definition of eclipse,
which shows that the eclipse is known through
the interposition and not vice versa. On
the other hand, can a single effect have
more than one cause? One might argue as follows:
if the same attribute is predicable of more
than one thing as its primary subject, let
B be a primary subject in which A inheres,
and C another primary subject of A, and D
and E primary subjects of B and C respectively.
A will then inhere in D and E, and B will
be the cause of A's inherence in D, C of
A's inherence in E. The presence of the cause
thus necessitates that of the effect, but
the presence of the effect necessitates the
presence not of all that may cause it but
only of a cause which yet need not be the
whole cause. We may, however, suggest that
if the connexion to be proved is always universal
and commensurate, not only will the cause
be a whole but also the effect will be universal
and commensurate. For instance, deciduous
character will belong exclusively to a subject
which is a whole, and, if this whole has
species, universally and commensurately to
those species-i. e. either to all species
of plant or to a single species. So in these
universal and commensurate connexions the
'middle' and its effect must reciprocate,
i. e. be convertible. Supposing, for example,
that the reason why trees are deciduous is
the coagulation of sap, then if a tree is
deciduous, coagulation must be present, and
if coagulation is present-not in any subject
but in a tree-then that tree must be deciduous.
17
Can the cause of an identical effect be not
identical in every instance of the effect
but different? Or is that impossible? Perhaps
it is impossible if the effect is demonstrated
as essential and not as inhering in virtue
of a symptom or an accident-because the middle
is then the definition of the major term-though
possible if the demonstration is not essential.
Now it is possible to consider the effect
and its subject as an accidental conjunction,
though such conjunctions would not be regarded
as connexions demanding scientific proof.
But if they are accepted as such, the middle
will correspond to the extremes, and be equivocal
if they are equivocal, generically one if
they are generically one. Take the question
why proportionals alternate. The cause when
they are lines, and when they are numbers,
is both different and identical; different
in so far as lines are lines and not numbers,
identical as involving a given determinate
increment. In all proportionals this is so.
Again, the cause of likeness between colour
and colour is other than that between figure
and figure; for likeness here is equivocal,
meaning perhaps in the latter case equality
of the ratios of the sides and equality of
the angles, in the case of colours identity
of the act of perceiving them, or something
else of the sort. Again, connexions requiring
proof which are identical by analogy middles
also analogous. The truth is that cause,
effect, and subject are reciprocally predicable
in the following way. If the species are
taken severally, the effect is wider than
the subject (e. g. the possession of external
angles equal to four right angles is an attribute
wider than triangle or are), but it is coextensive
with the species taken collectively (in this
instance with all figures whose external
angles are equal to four right angles). And
the middle likewise reciprocates, for the
middle is a definition of the major; which
is incidentally the reason why all the sciences
are built up through definition. We may illustrate
as follows. Deciduous is a universal attribute
of vine, and is at the same time of wider
extent than vine; and of fig, and is of wider
extent than fig: but it is not wider than
but coextensive with the totality of the
species. Then if you take the middle which
is proximate, it is a definition of deciduous.
I say that, because you will first reach
a middle next the subject, and a premiss
asserting it of the whole subject, and after
that a middle-the coagulation of sap or something
of the sort-proving the connexion of the
first middle with the major: but it is the
coagulation of sap at the junction of leaf-stalk
and stem which defines deciduous. If an explanation
in formal terms of the inter-relation of
cause and effect is demanded, we shall offer
the following. Let A be an attribute of all
B, and B of every species of D, but so that
both A and B are wider than their respective
subjects. Then B will be a universal attribute
of each species of D (since I call such an
attribute universal even if it is not commensurate,
and I call an attribute primary universal
if it is commensurate, not with each species
severally but with their totality), and it
extends beyond each of them taken separately.
Thus, B is the cause of A's inherence in
the species of D: consequently A must be
of wider extent than B; otherwise why should
B be the cause of A's inherence in D any
more than A the cause of B's inherence in
D? Now if A is an attribute of all the species
of E, all the species of E will be united
by possessing some common cause other than
B: otherwise how shall we be able to say
that A is predicable of all of which E is
predicable, while E is not predicable of
all of which A can be predicated? I mean
how can there fail to be some special cause
of A's inherence in E, as there was of A's
inherence in all the species of D? Then are
the species of E, too, united by possessing
some common cause? This cause we must look
for. Let us call it C. We conclude, then,
that the same effect may have more than one
cause, but not in subjects specifically identical.
For instance, the cause of longevity in quadrupeds
is lack of bile, in birds a dry constitution-or
certainly something different.
18
If immediate premisses are not reached at
once, and there is not merely one middle
but several middles, i. e. several causes;
is the cause of the property's inherence
in the several species the middle which is
proximate to the primary universal, or the
middle which is proximate to the species?
Clearly the cause is that nearest to each
species severally in which it is manifested,
for that is the cause of the subject's falling
under the universal. To illustrate formally:
C is the cause of B's inherence in D; hence
C is the cause of A's inherence in D, B of
A's inherence in C, while the cause of A's
inherence in B is B itself.
19
As regards syllogism and demonstration, the
definition of, and the conditions required
to produce each of them, are now clear, and
with that also the definition of, and the
conditions required to produce, demonstrative
knowledge, since it is the same as demonstration.
As to the basic premisses, how they become
known and what is the developed state of
knowledge of them is made clear by raising
some preliminary problems. We have already
said that scientific knowledge through demonstration
is impossible unless a man knows the primary
immediate premisses. But there are questions
which might be raised in respect of the apprehension
of these immediate premisses: one might not
only ask whether it is of the same kind as
the apprehension of the conclusions, but
also whether there is or is not scientific
knowledge of both; or scientific knowledge
of the latter, and of the former a different
kind of knowledge; and, further, whether
the developed states of knowledge are not
innate but come to be in us, or are innate
but at first unnoticed. Now it is strange
if we possess them from birth; for it means
that we possess apprehensions more accurate
than demonstration and fail to notice them.
If on the other hand we acquire them and
do not previously possess them, how could
we apprehend and learn without a basis of
pre-existent knowledge? For that is impossible,
as we used to find in the case of demonstration.
So it emerges that neither can we possess
them from birth, nor can they come to be
in us if we are without knowledge of them
to the extent of having no such developed
state at all. Therefore we must possess a
capacity of some sort, but not such as to
rank higher in accuracy than these developed
states. And this at least is an obvious characteristic
of all animals, for they possess a congenital
discriminative capacity which is called sense-perception.
But though sense-perception is innate in
all animals, in some the sense-impression
comes to persist, in others it does not.
So animals in which this persistence does
not come to be have either no knowledge at
all outside the act of perceiving, or no
knowledge of objects of which no impression
persists; animals in which it does come into
being have perception and can continue to
retain the sense-impression in the soul:
and when such persistence is frequently repeated
a further distinction at once arises between
those which out of the persistence of such
sense-impressions develop a power of systematizing
them and those which do not. So out of sense-perception
comes to be what we call memory, and out
of frequently repeated memories of the same
thing develops experience; for a number of
memories constitute a single experience.
From experience again-i. e. from the universal
now stabilized in its entirety within the
soul, the one beside the many which is a
single identity within them all-originate
the skill of the craftsman and the knowledge
of the man of science, skill in the sphere
of coming to be and science in the sphere
of being. We conclude that these states of
knowledge are neither innate in a determinate
form, nor developed from other higher states
of knowledge, but from sense-perception.
It is like a rout in battle stopped by first
one man making a stand and then another,
until the original formation has been restored.
The soul is so constituted as to be capable
of this process. Let us now restate the account
given already, though with insufficient clearness.
When one of a number of logically indiscriminable
particulars has made a stand, the earliest
universal is present in the soul: for though
the act of sense-perception is of the particular,
its content is universal-is man, for example,
not the man Callias. A fresh stand is made
among these rudimentary universals, and the
process does not cease until the indivisible
concepts, the true universals, are established:
e. g. such and such a species of animal is
a step towards the genus animal, which by
the same process is a step towards a further
generalization. Thus it is clear that we
must get to know the primary premisses by
induction; for the method by which even sense-perception
implants the universal is inductive. Now
of the thinking states by which we grasp
truth, some are unfailingly true, others
admit of error-opinion, for instance, and
calculation, whereas scientific knowing and
intuition are always true: further, no other
kind of thought except intuition is more
accurate than scientific knowledge, whereas
primary premisses are more knowable than
demonstrations, and all scientific knowledge
is discursive. From these considerations
it follows that there will be no scientific
knowledge of the primary premisses, and since
except intuition nothing can be truer than
scientific knowledge, it will be intuition
that apprehends the primary premisses-a result
which also follows from the fact that demonstration
cannot be the originative source of demonstration,
nor, consequently, scientific knowledge of
scientific knowledge. If, therefore, it is
the only other kind of true thinking except
scientific knowing, intuition will be the
originative source of scientific knowledge.
And the originative source of science grasps
the original basic premiss, while science
as a whole is similarly related as originative
source to the whole body of fact.
END OF ARISTOTLE - POSTERIOR ANALYTICS |