Ennead VI
First tractate: On the kinds of being- (1)
Written by Plotinus, 250 AD
- 1. Philosophy at a very early stage investigated the number and
character of the Existents. Various theories resulted: some declared for one
Existent, others for a finite number, others again for an infinite number,
while as regards the nature of the Existents- one, numerically finite, or
numerically infinite- there was a similar disagreement. These theories, in so
far as they have been adequately examined by later workers, may be passed over
here; our attention must be directed upon the results of those whose
examination has led them to posit on their awn account certain well-defined
genera.
- These thinkers rejected pure unity on the ground of the plurality
observed even in the Intellectual world; they rejected an infinite number as
not reconcilable with the facts and as defying knowledge: considering the
foundations of being to be "genera" rather than elements strictly so called,
they concluded for a finite number. Of these "genera" some found ten, others
less, others no doubt more.
- But here again there is a divergence of views. To some the genera are
first-principles; to others they indicate only a generic classification of the
Existents themselves.
- Let us begin with the well-known tenfold division of the Existents,
and consider whether we are to understand ten genera ranged under the common
name of Being, or ten categories. That the term Being has not the same sense in
all ten is rightly maintained.
- But a graver problem confronts us at the outset: Are the ten found
alike in the Intellectual and in the Sensible realms? Or are all found in the
Sensible and some only in the Intellectual? All in the Intellectual and some in
the Sensible is manifestly impossible.
- At this point it would be natural to investigate which of the ten
belong to both spheres, and whether the Existents of the Intellectual are to be
ranged under one and the same genus with the Existents in the Sensible, or
whether the term "Existence" [or Substance] is equivocal as applied to both
realms. If the equivocation exists, the number of genera will be increased: if
there is no equivocation, it is strange to find the one same "Existence"
applying to the primary and to the derivative Existents when there is no common
genus embracing both primal and secondary.
- These thinkers are however not considering the Intellectual realm in
their division, which was not intended to cover all the Existents; the Supreme
they overlooked.
- 2. But are we really obliged to posit the existence of such genera?
- Take Substance, for Substance must certainly be our starting-point:
what are the grounds for regarding Substance as one single genus?
- It has been remarked that Substance cannot be a single entity common
to both the Intellectual and the Sensible worlds. We may add that such
community would entail the existence of something prior to Intellectual and
Sensible Substances alike, something distinct from both as predicated of both;
and this prior would be neither body nor unembodied; for it were one or the
other, body would be unembodied, or the unembodied would be the body.
- This conclusion must not however prevent our seeking in the actual
substance of the Sensible world an element held in common by Matter, by Form
and by their Composite, all of which are designated as substances, though it is
not maintained that they are Substance in an equal degree; Form is usually held
to be Substance in a higher degree than Matter, and rightly so, in spite of
those who would have Matter to be the more truly real.
- There is further the distinction drawn between what are known as
First and Second Substances. But what is their common basis, seeing that the
First are the source from which the Second derive their right to be called
substances?
- But, in sum, it is impossible to define Substance: determine its
property, and still you have not attained to its essence. Even the definition,
"That which, numerically one and the same, is receptive of contraries," will
hardly be applicable to all substances alike.
- 3. But perhaps we should rather speak of some single category,
embracing Intellectual Substance, Matter, Form, and the Composite of Matter and
Form. One might refer to the family of the Heraclids as a unity in the sense,
not of a common element in all its members, but of a common origin: similarly,
Intellectual Substance would be Substance in the first degree, the others being
substances by derivation and in a lower degree.
- But what is the objection to including everything in a single
category, all else of which existence is predicated being derived from that one
thing, Existence or Substance? Because, granted that things be no more than
modifications of Substance, there is a distinct grading of substances
themselves. Moreover, the single category does not put us in a position to
build on Substance, or to grasp it in its very truth as the plausible source of
the other substances.
- Supposing we grant that all things known as substances are
homogeneous as possessing something denied to the other genera, what precisely
is this something, this individuality, this subject which is never a predicate,
this thing not present in any thing as in a subject, this thing which does not
owe its essential character to any other thing, as a quality takes character
from a body and a quantity from a substance, as time is related to motion and
motion to the moved?
- The Second Substance is, it is true, a predicate. But predication in
this case signifies a different relation from that just considered; it reveals
the genus inherent in the subject and the subject's essential character,
whereas whiteness is predicated of a thing in the sense of being present in the
thing.
- The properties adduced may indeed be allowed to distinguish Substance
from the other Existents. They afford a means of grouping substances together
and calling them by a common name. They do not however establish the unity of a
genus, and they do not bring to light the concept and the nature of Substance.
- These considerations are sufficient for our purpose: let us now
proceed to investigate the nature of Quantity.
- 4. We are told that number is Quantity in the primary sense, number
together with all continuous magnitude, space and time: these are the standards
to which all else that is considered as Quantity is referred, including motion
which is Quantity because its time is quantitative- though perhaps, conversely,
the time takes its continuity from the motion.
- If it is maintained that the continuous is a Quantity by the fact of
its continuity, then the discrete will not be a Quantity. If, on the contrary,
the continuous possesses Quantity as an accident, what is there common to both
continuous and discrete to make them quantities?
- Suppose we concede that numbers are quantities: we are merely
allowing them the name of quantity; the principle which gives them this name
remains obscure.
- On the other hand, line and surface and body are not called
quantities; they are called magnitudes: they become known as quantities only
when they are rated by number-two yards, three yards. Even the natural body
becomes a quantity when measured, as does the space which it occupies; but this
is quantity accidental, not quantity essential; what we seek to grasp is not
accidental quantity but Quantity independent and essential, Quantity-Absolute.
Three oxen is not a quantity; it is their number, the three, that is Quantity;
for in three oxen we are dealing with two categories. So too with a line of a
stated length, a surface of a given area; the area will be a quantity but not
the surface, which only comes under that category when it constitutes a
definite geometric figure.
- Are we then to consider numbers, and numbers only, as constituting
the category of Quantity? If we mean numbers in themselves, they are
substances, for the very good reason that they exist independently. If we mean
numbers displayed in the objects participant in number, the numbers which give
the count of the objects- ten horses or ten oxen, and not ten units- then we
have a paradoxical result: first, the numbers in themselves, it would appear,
are substances but the numbers in objects are not; and secondly, the numbers
inhere in the objects as measures [of extension or weight], yet as standing
outside the objects they have no measuring power, as do rulers and scales. If
however their existence is independent, and they do not inhere in the objects,
but are simply called in for the purpose of measurement, the objects will be
quantities only to the extent of participating in Quantity.
- So with the numbers themselves: how can they constitute the category
of Quantity? They are measures; but how do measures come to be quantities or
Quantity? Doubtless in that, existing as they do among the Existents and not
being adapted to any of the other categories, they find their place under the
influence of verbal suggestion and so are referred to the so-called category of
Quantity. We see the unit mark off one measurement and then proceed to another;
and number thus reveals the amount of a thing, and the mind measures by
availing itself of the total figure.
- It follows that in measuring it is not measuring essence; it
pronounces its "one" or "two," whatever the character of the objects, even
summing contraries. It does not take count of condition- hot, handsome; it
simply notes how many.
- Number then, whether regarded in itself or in the participant
objects, belongs to the category of Quantity, but the participant objects do
not. "Three yards long" does not fall under the category of Quantity, but only
the three.
- Why then are magnitudes classed as quantities? Not because they are
so in the strict sense, but because they approximate to Quantity, and because
objects in which magnitudes inhere are themselves designated as quantities. We
call a thing great or small from its participation in a high number or a low.
True, greatness and smallness are not claimed to be quantities, but relations:
but it is by their apparent possession of quantity that they are thought of as
relations. All this, however, needs more careful examination.
- In sum, we hold that there is no single genus of Quantity. Only
number is Quantity, the rest [magnitudes, space, time, motion] quantities only
in a secondary degree. We have therefore not strictly one genus, but one
category grouping the approximate with the primary and the secondary.
- We have however to enquire in what sense the abstract numbers are
substances. Can it be that they are also in a manner quantitative? Into
whatever category they fall, the other numbers [those inherent in objects] can
have nothing in common with them but the name. 5. Speech, time, motion- in what
sense are these quantities?
- Let us begin with speech. It is subject to measurement, but only in
so far as it is sound; it is not a quantity in its essential nature, which
nature is that it be significant, as noun and verb are significant. The air is
its Matter, as it is Matter to verb and noun, the components of speech.
- To be more precise, we may define speech as an impact [made upon the
outer air by the breath], though it is not so much the impact as the impression
which the impact produces and which, as it were, imposes Form [upon the air].
Speech, thus, is rather an action than a quantity- an action with a
significance. Though perhaps it would be truer to say that while this motion,
this impact, is an action, the counter-motion is an experience [or Passion]; or
each may be from different points of view either an action or an experience: or
we may think of speech as action upon a substrate [air] and experience within
that substrate.
- If however voice is not characteristically impact, but is simply air,
two categories will be involved: voice is significant, and the one category
will not be sufficient to account for this significance without associating
with a second.
- With regard to time, if it is to be thought of as a measure, we must
determine what it is that applies this measure. It must clearly be either Soul
or the Present Moment. If on the contrary we take time to be something measured
and regard it as being of such and such extension- a year, for example- then we
may consider it as a quantity: essentially however time is of a different
nature; the very fact that we can attribute this or that length to it shows us
that it is not length: in other words, time is not Quantity. Quantity in the
strict sense is the Quantity not inbound with things; if things became
quantities by mere participation in Quantity, then Substance itself would be
identical with Quantity.
- Equality and inequality must be regarded as properties of
Quantity-Absolute, not of the participants, or of them not essentially but only
accidentally: such participants as "three yards' length," which becomes a
quantity, not as belonging to a single genus of Quantity, but by being subsumed
under the one head, the one category.
- 6. In considering Relation we must enquire whether it possesses the
community of a genus, or whether it may on other grounds be treated as a unity.
- Above all, has Relation- for example, that of right and left, double
and half- any actuality? Has it, perhaps, actuality in some cases only, as for
instance in what is termed "posterior" but not in what is termed "prior"? Or is
its actuality in no case conceivable?
- What meaning, then, are we to attach to double and half and all other
cases of less and more; to habit and disposition, reclining, sitting, standing;
to father, son, master, slave; to like, unlike, equal, unequal; to active and
passive, measure and measured; or again to knowledge and sensation, as related
respectively to the knowable and the sensible?
- Knowledge, indeed, may be supposed to entail in relation to the known
object some actual entity corresponding to that object's Ideal Form, and
similarly with sensation as related to the sense-object. The active will
perform some constant function in relation to the passive, as will the measure
in relation to the measured.
- But what will emerge from the relation of like to like? Nothing will
emerge. Likeness is the inherence of qualitative identity; its entire content
is the quality present in the two objects.
- From equality, similarly, nothing emerges. The relation merely
presupposes the existence of a quantitative identity;- is nothing but our
judgement comparing objects essentially independent and concluding, "This and
that have the same magnitude, the same quality; this has produced that; this is
superior to that."
- Again, what meaning can sitting and standing have apart from sitter
and stander? The term "habit" either implies a having, in which case it
signifies possession, or else it arises from something had, and so denotes
quality; and similarly with disposition.
- What then in these instances can be the meaning of correlatives apart
from our conception of their juxtaposition? "Greater" may refer to very
different magnitudes; "different" to all sorts of objects: the comparison is
ours; it does not lie in the things themselves.
- Right and left, before and behind, would seem to belong less to the
category of Relation than to that of Situation. Right means "situated at one
point," left means "situated at another." But the right and left are in our
conception, nothing of them in the things themselves.
- Before and after are merely two times; the relation is again of our
making.
- 7. Now if we do not mean anything by Relation but are victims of
words, none of the relations mentioned can exist: Relation will be a notion
void of content.
- Suppose however that we do possess ourselves of objective truth when
in comparing two points of time we pronounce one prior, or posterior, to the
other, that priority does entail something distinct from the objects to which
it refers; admit an objective truth behind the relation of left and right: does
this apply also to magnitudes, and is the relation exhibiting excess and
deficiency also something distinct from the quantities involved?
- Now one thing is double of another quite apart from our speech or
thought; one thing possesses and another is possessed before we notice the
fact; equals do not await our comparison but- and this applies to Quality as
well as Quantity- rest upon an identity existing between the objects compared:
in all the conditions in which we assert Relation the mutual relation exists
over and above the objects; we perceive it as already existent; our knowledge
is directed upon a thing, there to be known- a clear testimony to the reality
of Relation.
- In these circumstances we can no longer put the question of its
existence. We have simply to distinguish: sometimes the relation subsists while
the objects remain unaltered and even apart; sometimes it depends upon their
combination; sometimes, while they remain unchanged, the relation utterly
ceases, or, as happens with right and near, becomes different. These are the
facts which chiefly account for the notion that Relation has no reality in such
circumstances.
- Our task, thus, is to give full value to this elusive character of
Relation, and, then to enquire what there is that is constant in all these
particular cases and whether this constant is generic or accidental; and having
found this constant, we must discover what sort of actuality it possesses.
- It need hardly be said that we are not to affirm Relation where one
thing is simply an attribute of another, as a habit is an attribute of a soul
or of a body; it is not Relation when a soul belongs to this individual or
dwells in that body. Relation enters only when the actuality of the
relationships is derived from no other source than Relation itself; the
actuality must be, not that which is characteristic of the substances in
question, but that which is specifically called relative. Thus double with its
correlative, half gives actuality neither to two yards' length or the number
two, nor to one yard's length or the number one; what happens is that, when
these quantities are viewed in their relation, they are found to be not merely
two and one respectively, but to produce the assertion and to exhibit the fact
of standing one to the other in the condition of double and half. Out of the
objects in a certain conjunction this condition of being double and half has
issued as something distinct from either; double and half have emerged as
correlatives, and their being is precisely this of mutual dependence; the
double exists by its superiority over the half, and the half by its
inferiority; there is no priority to distinguish double from half; they arise
simultaneously.
- It is another question whether they endure simultaneously. Take the
case of father and son, and such relationships; the father dies, but the other
is still his son, and so with brothers. Moreover, we see likeness where one of
the like people is dead.
- 8. But we are digressing: we must resume our enquiry into the cause
of dissimilarity among relations. Yet we must first be informed what reality,
common to all cases, is possessed by this Existence derived from mutual
conditions.
- Now the common principle in question cannot be a body. The only
alternative is that, if it does exist, it be something bodiless, either in the
objects thus brought together or outside of them.
- Further, if Relation always takes the same form, the term is univocal
[and specific differentiation is impossible]; if not, that is if it differs
from case to case, the term is equivocal, and the same reality will not
necessarily be implied by the mere use of the term Relation.
- How then shall we distinguish relations? We may observe that some
things have an inactive or dormant relation, with which their actuality is
entirely simultaneous; others, combining power and function with their
relation, have the relation in some mode always even though the mode be merely
that of potentiality, but attain to actual being only in contact with their
correlatives. Or perhaps all distinctions may be reduced to that between
producer and product, where the product merely gives a name to the producer of
its actuality: an example of this is the relation of father to son, though here
both producer and product have a sort of actuality, which we call life.
- Are we thus, then, to divide Relation, and thereby reject the notion
of an identical common element in the different kinds of Relation, making it a
universal rule that the relation takes a different character in either
correlative? We must in this case recognise that in our distinction between
productive and non-productive relations we are overlooking the equivocation
involved in making the terms cover both action and passion, as though these two
were one, and ignoring the fact that production takes a different form in the
two correlatives. Take the case of equality, producing equals: nothing is equal
without equality, nothing identical without identity. Greatness and smallness
both entail a presence- the presence of greatness and smallness respectively.
When we come to greater and smaller, the participants in these relations are
greater and smaller only when greatness and smallness are actually observed in
them.
- 9. It follows that in the cases specified above- agent, knowledge and
the rest- the relation must be considered as in actual operation, and the Act
and the Reason-Principle in the Act must be assumed to be real: in all other
cases there will be simply participation in an Ideal-Form, in a
Reason-Principle.
- If Reality implied embodiment, we should indeed be forced to deny
Reality to these conditions called relative; if however we accord the
pre-eminent place to the unembodied and to the Reason-Principles, and at the
same time maintain that relations are Reason-Principles and participate in
Ideal-Forms, we are bound to seek their causes in that higher sphere.
Doubleness, it is clear, is the cause of a thing being double, and from it is
derived halfness.
- Some correlatives owe their designations to the same Form, others to
opposite Forms; it is thus that two objects are simultaneously double and half
of each other, and one great and the other small. It may happen that both
correlatives exist in one object-likeness and unlikeness, and, in general,
identity and difference, so that the same thing will be at once like and
unlike, identical and different.
- The question arises here whether sharing in the same Form could make
one man depraved and another more depraved. In the case of total depravity,
clearly the two are made equal by the absence of a Form. Where there is a
difference of degree, the one has participated in a Form which has failed to
predominate, the other in a Form which has failed still more: or, if we choose
the negative aspect, we may think of them both as failing to participate in a
Form which naturally belonged to them.
- Sensation may be regarded as a Form of double origin [determined both
by the sense-organ and by the sensible object]; and similarly with knowledge.
- Habit is an Act directed upon something had [some experience produced
by habit] and binding it as it were with the subject having [experiencing], as
the Act of production binds producer and product.
- Measurement is an Act of the measurer upon the measured object: it
too is therefore a kind of Reason-Principle.
- Now if the condition of being related is regarded as a Form having a
generic unity, Relation must be allowed to be a single genus owing its reality
to a Reason-Principle involved in all instances. If however the
Reason-Principles [governing the correlatives] stand opposed and have the
differences to which we have referred, there may perhaps not be a single genus,
but this will not prevent all relatives being expressed in terms of a certain
likeness and falling under a single category.
- But even if the cases of which we have spoken can be subsumed under a
single head, it is nevertheless impossible to include in a single genus all
that goes with them in the one common category: for the category includes
negations and derivatives- not only, for example, double but also its negative,
the resultant doubleness and the act of doubling. But we cannot include in one
genus both the thing and its negative- double and not-double, relative and
not-relative- any more than in dealing with the genus animal we can insert in
it the nonanimal. Moreover, doubleness and doubling have only the relation to
double that whiteness has to white; they cannot be classed as identical with
it.
- 10. As regards Quality, the source of what we call a "quale," we must
in the first place consider what nature it possesses in accordance with which
it produces the "qualia," and whether, remaining one and the same in virtue of
that common ground, it has also differences whereby it produces the variety of
species. If there is no common ground and the term Quality involves many
connotations, there cannot be a single genus of Quality.
- What then will be the common ground in habit, disposition, passive
quality, figure, shape? In light, thick and lean?
- If we hold this common ground to be a power adapting itself to the
forms of habits, dispositions and physical capacities, a power which gives the
possessor whatever capacities he has, we have no plausible explanation of
incapacities. Besides, how are figure and the shape of a given thing to be
regarded as a power?
- Moreover, at this, Being will have no power qua Being but only when
Quality has been added to it; and the activities of those substances which are
activities in the highest degree, will be traceable to Quality, although they
are autonomous and owe their essential character to powers wholly their own!
- Perhaps, however, qualities are conditioned by powers which are
posterior to the substances as such [and so do not interfere with their
essential activities]. Boxing, for example, is not a power of man qua man;
reasoning is: therefore reasoning, on this hypothesis, is not quality but a
natural possession of the mature human being; it therefore is called a quality
only by analogy. Thus, Quality is a power which adds the property of being
qualia to substances already existent.
- The differences distinguishing substances from each other are called
qualities only by analogy; they are, more strictly, Acts and Reason-Principles,
or parts of Reason-Principles, and though they may appear merely to qualify the
substance, they in fact indicate its essence.
- Qualities in the true sense- those, that is, which determine qualia-
being in accordance with our definition powers, will in virtue of this common
ground be a kind of Reason-Principle; they will also be in a sense Forms, that
is, excellences and imperfections whether of soul or of body.
- But how can they all be powers? Beauty or health of soul or body,
very well: but surely not ugliness, disease, weakness, incapacity. In a word,
is powerlessness a power?
- It may be urged that these are qualities in so far as qualia are also
named after them: but may not the qualia be so called by analogy, and not in
the strict sense of the single principle? Not only may the term be understood
in the four ways [of Aristotle], but each of the four may have at least a
twofold significance.
- In the first place, Quality is not merely a question of action and
passion, involving a simple distinction between the potentially active
[quality] and the passive: health, disposition and habit, disease, strength and
weakness are also classed as qualities. It follows that the common ground is
not power, but something we have still to seek.
- Again, not all qualities can be regarded as Reason-Principles:
chronic disease cannot be a Reason-Principle. Perhaps, however, we must speak
in such cases of privations, restricting the term "Quantities" to Ideal-Forms
and powers. Thus we shall have, not a single genus, but reference only to the
unity of a category. Knowledge will be regarded as a Form and a power,
ignorance as a privation and powerlessness.
- On the other hand, powerlessness and disease are a kind of Form;
disease and vice have many powers though looking to evil.
- But how can a mere failure be a power? Doubtless the truth is that
every quality performs its own function independently of a standard; for in no
case could it produce an effect outside of its power.
- Even beauty would seem to have a power of its own. Does this apply to
triangularity?
- Perhaps, after all, it is not a power we must consider, but a
disposition. Thus, qualities will be determined by the forms and
characteristics of the object qualified: their common element, then, will be
Form and ideal type, imposed upon Substance and posterior to it.
- But then, how do we account for the powers? We may doubtless remark
that even the natural boxer is so by being constituted in a particular way;
similarly, with the man unable to box: to generalize, the quality is a
characteristic non-essential. Whatever is seen to apply alike to Being and to
non-Being, as do heat and whiteness and colours generally, is either different
from Being- is, for example, an Act of Being- or else is some secondary of
Being, derived from it, contained in it, its image and likeness.
- But if Quality is determined by formation and characteristic and
Reason-Principle, how explain the various cases of powerlessness and deformity?
Doubtless we must think of Principles imperfectly present, as in the case of
deformity. And disease- how does that imply a Reason-Principle? Here, no doubt,
we must think of a principle disturbed, the Principle of health.
- But it is not necessary that all qualities involve a
Reason-Principle; it suffices that over and above the various kinds of
disposition there exist a common element distinct from Substance, and it is
what comes after the substance that constitutes Quality in an object.
- But triangularity is a quality of that in which it is present; it is
however no longer triangularity as such, but the triangularity present in that
definite object and modified in proportion to its success in shaping that
object.
- 11. But if these considerations are sound, why has Quality more than
one species? What is the ground for distinguishing between habit and
disposition, seeing that no differentia of Quality is involved in permanence
and non-permanence? A disposition of any kind is sufficient to constitute a
quality; permanence is a mere external addition. It might however be urged that
dispositions are but incomplete "forms"- if the term may pass- habits being
complete ones. But incomplete, they are not qualities; if already qualities,
the permanence is an external addition.
- How do physical powers form a distinct species? If they are classed
as qualities in virtue of being powers, power, we have seen, is not a necessary
concomitant of qualities. If, however, we hold that the natural boxer owes his
quality to a particular disposition, power is something added and does not
contribute to the quality, since power is found in habits also.
- Another point: why is natural ability to be distinguished from that
acquired by learning? Surely, if both are qualities, they cannot be
differentiae of Quality: gained by practice or given in nature, it is the same
ability; the differentia will be external to Quality; it cannot be deduced from
the Ideal Form of boxing. Whether some qualities as distinguished from others
are derived from experience is immaterial; the source of the quality makes no
difference- none, I mean, pointing to variations and differences of Quality.
- A further question would seem to be involved: If certain qualities
are derived from experience but here is a discrepancy in the manner and source
of the experience, how are they to be included in the same species? And again,
if some create the experience, others are created by it, the term Quality as
applied to both classes will be equivocal.
- And what part is played by the individual form? If it constitutes the
individual's specific character, it is not a quality; if, however, it is what
makes an object beautiful or ugly after the specific form has been determined,
then it involves a Reason-Principle.
- Rough and smooth, tenuous and dense may rightly be classed as
qualities. It is true that they are not determined by distances and
approximations, or in general by even or uneven dispositions, of parts; though,
were they so determined, they might well even then be qualities.
- Knowledge of the meaning of "light" and "heavy" will reveal their
place in the classification. An ambiguity will however be latent in the term
"light," unless it be determined by comparative weight: it would then implicate
leanness and fineness, and involve another species distinct from the four [of
Aristotle].
- 12. If then we do not propose to divide Quality in this [fourfold]
manner, what basis of division have we?
- We must examine whether qualities may not prove to be divisible on
the principle that some belong to the body and others to the soul. Those of the
body would be subdivided according to the senses, some being attributed to
sight, others to hearing and taste, others to smell and touch. Those of the
soul would presumably be allotted to appetite, emotion, reason; though, again,
they may be distinguished by the differences of the activities they condition,
in so far as activities are engendered by these qualities; or according as they
are beneficial or injurious, the benefits and injuries being duly classified.
This last is applicable also to the classification of bodily qualities, which
also produce differences of benefit and injury: these differences must be
regarded as distinctively qualitative; for either the benefit and injury are
held to be derived from Quality and the quale, or else some other explanation
must be found for them.
- A point for consideration is how the quale, as conditioned by
Quality, can belong to the same category: obviously there can be no single
genus embracing both.
- Further, if "boxer" is in the category of Quality, why not "agent" as
well? And with agent goes "active." Thus "active" need not go into the category
of Relation; nor again need "passive," if "patient" is a quale. Moreover,
agent" is perhaps better assigned to the category of Quality for the reason
that the term implies power, and power is Quality. But if power as such were
determined by Substance [and not by Quality], the agent, though ceasing to be a
quale, would not necessarily become a relative. Besides, "active" is not like
"greater": the greater, to be the greater, demands a less, whereas "active"
stands complete by the mere possession of its specific character.
- It may however be urged that while the possession of that character
makes it a quale, it is a relative in so far as it directs upon an external
object the power indicated by its name. Why, then, is not "boxer" a relative,
and "boxing" as well? Boxing is entirely related to an external object; its
whole theory pre-supposes this external. And in the case of the other arts- or
most of them- investigation would probably warrant the assertion that in so far
as they affect the soul they are qualities, while in so far as they look
outward they are active and as being directed to an external object are
relatives. They are relatives in the other sense also that they are thought of
as habits.
- Can it then be held that there is any distinct reality implied in
activity, seeing that the active is something distinct only according as it is
a quale? It may perhaps be held that the tendency towards action of living
beings, and especially of those having freewill, implies a reality of activity
[as well as a reality of Quality].
- But what is the function of the active in connection with those
non-living powers which we have classed as qualities? Doubtless to recruit any
object it encounters, making the object a participant in its content.
- But if one same object both acts and is acted upon, how do we then
explain the active? Observe also that the greater- in itself perhaps a fixed
three yards' length- will present itself as both greater and less according to
its external contacts.
- It will be objected that greater and less are due to participation in
greatness and smallness; and it might be inferred that a thing is active or
passive by participation in activity or passivity.
- This is the place for enquiring also whether the qualities of the
Sensible and Intellectual realms can be included under one head- a question
intended only for those who ascribe qualities to the higher realm as well as
the lower. And even if Ideal Forms of qualities are not posited, yet once the
term "habit" is used in reference to Intellect, the question arises whether
there is anything common to that habit and the habit we know in the lower.
- Wisdom too is generally admitted to exist There. Obviously, if it
shares only its name with our wisdom, it is not to be reckoned among things of
this sphere; if, however, the import is in both cases the same, then Quality is
common to both realms- unless, of course, it be maintained that everything
There, including even intellection, is Substance.
- This question, however, applies to all the categories: are the two
spheres irreconcilable, or can they be co-ordinated with a unity?
- 13. With regard to Date:
- If "yesterday," "to-morrow," "last year" and similar terms denote
parts of time, why should they not be included in the same genus as time? It
would seem only reasonable to range under time the past, present and future,
which are its species. But time is referred to Quantity; what then is the need
for a separate category of Date?
- If we are told that past and future- including under past such
definite dates as yesterday and last year which must clearly be subordinate to
past time- and even the present "now" are not merely time but time- when, we
reply, in the first place, that the notion of time- when involves time; that,
further, if "yesterday" is time-gone-by, it will be a composite, since time and
gone-by are distinct notions: we have two categories instead of the single one
required.
- But suppose that Date is defined not as time but as that which is in
time; if by that which is in time is meant the subject- Socrates in the
proposition "Socrates existed last year"- that subject is external to the
notion of time, and we have again a duality.
- Consider, however, the proposition "Socrates- or some action- exists
at this time"; what can be the meaning here other than "in a part of time"? But
if, admitted that Date is "a part of time," it be felt that the part requires
definition and involves something more than mere time, that we must say the
part of time gone by, several notions are massed in the proposition: we have
the part which qua part is a relative; and we have "gone-by" which, if it is to
have any import at all, must mean the past: but this "past," we have shown, is
a species of time.
- It may be urged that "the past" is in its nature indefinite, while
"yesterday" and "last year" are definite. We reply, first, that we demand some
place in our classification for the past: secondly, that "yesterday," as
definite past, is necessarily definite time. But definite time implies a
certain quantity of time: therefore, if time is quantitative, each of the terms
in question must signify a definite quantity.
- Again, if by "yesterday" we are expected to understand that this or
that event has taken Place at a definite time gone by, we have more notions
than ever. Besides, if we must introduce fresh categories because one thing
acts in another- as in this case something acts in time- we have more again
from its acting upon another in another. This point will be made plain by what
follows in our discussion of Place.
- 14. The Academy and the Lyceum are places, and parts of Place, just
as "above," "below," "here" are species or parts of Place; the difference is of
minuter delimitation.
- If then "above," "below," "the middle" are places- Delphi, for
example, is the middle [of the earth]- and "near-the-middle" is also a place-
Athens, and of course the Lyceum and the other places usually cited, are near
the middle- what need have we to go further and seek beyond Place, admitting as
we do that we refer in every instance to a place?
- If, however, we have in mind the presence of one thing in another, we
are not speaking of a single entity, we are not expressing a single notion.
- Another consideration: when we say that a man is here, we present a
relation of the man to that in which he is, a relation of the container to the
contained. Why then do we not class as a relative whatever may be produced from
this relation?
- Besides, how does "here" differ from "at Athens"? The demonstrative
"here" admittedly signifies place; so, then, does "at Athens": "at Athens"
therefore belongs to the category of Place.
- Again, if "at Athens" means "is at Athens," then the "is" as well as
the place belongs to the predicate; but this cannot be right: we do not regard
"is a quality" as predicate, but "a quality."
- Furthermore, if "in time," "in place" are to be ranged under a
category other than that applying to time and place, why not a separate
category for "in a vessel"? Why not distinct categories for "in Matter," "in a
subject," "a part in a whole," "a whole in its parts," "a genus in its
species," "a species in a genus"? We are certainly on the way to a goodly
number of categories.
- 15. The "category of Action":
- The quantum has been regarded as a single genus on the ground that
Quantity and Number are attributes of Substance and posterior to it; the quale
has been regarded as another genus because Quality is an attribute of
Substance: on the same principle it is maintained that since activity is an
attribute of Substance, Action constitutes yet another genus.
- Does then the action constitute the genus, or the activity from which
the action springs, in the same way as Quality is the genus from which the
quale is derived? Perhaps activity, action and agent should all be embraced
under a single head? But, on the one hand, the action- unlike activity- tends
to comport the agent; and on the other, it signifies being in some activity and
therefore Being-in-Act [actual as distinct from potential Being]. Consequently
the category will be one of Act rather than of Action.
- Act moreover incontestably manifests itself in Substance, as was
found to be the case with Quality: it is connected with Substance as being a
form of motion. But Motion is a distinct genus: for, seeing that Quality is a
distinct attribute of Substance, and Quality a distinct attribute, and Relative
takes its being from the relation of one substance to another, there can be no
reason why Motion, also an attribute of Substance, should not also constitute a
distinct genus.
- 16. If it be urged that Motion is but imperfect Act, there would be
no objection to giving priority to Act and subordinating to it Motion with its
imperfection as a species: Act would thus be predicated of Motion, but with the
qualification "imperfect."
- Motion is thought of as imperfect, not because it is not an Act, but
because, entirely an Act, it yet entails repetition [lacks finality]. It
repeats, not in order that it may achieve actuality- it is already actual- but
that it may attain a goal distinct from itself and posterior: it is not the
motion itself that is then consummated but the result at which it aims. Walking
is walking from the outset; when one should traverse a racecourse but has not
yet done so, the deficiency lies not in the walking- not in the motion- but in
the amount of walking accomplished; no matter what the amount, it is walking
and motion already: a moving man has motion and a cutter cuts before there is
any question of Quantity. And just as we can speak of Act without implying
time, so we can of Motion, except in the sense of motion over a defined area;
Act is timeless, and so is Motion pure and simple.
- Are we told that Motion is necessarily in time, inasmuch as it
involves continuity? But, at this, sight, never ceasing to see, will also be
continuous and in time. Our critic, it is true, may find support in that
principle of proportion which states that you may make a division of no matter
what motion, and find that neither the motion nor its duration has any
beginning but that the division may be continued indefinitely in the direction
of the motion's origin: this would mean that a motion just begun has been in
progress from an infinity of time, that it is infinite as regards its
beginning.
- Such then is the result of separating Act from Motion: Act, we aver,
is timeless; yet we are forced to maintain not only that time is necessary to
quantitative motion, but, unreservedly, that Motion is quantitative in its very
nature; though indeed, if it were a case of motion occupying a day or some
other quantity of time, the exponents of this view would be the first to admit
that Quantity is present to Motion only by way of accident.
- In sum, just as Act is timeless, so there is no reason why Motion
also should not primarily be timeless, time attaching to it only in so far as
it happens to have such and such an extension.
- Timeless change is sanctioned in the expression, "as if change could
not take place all at once"; if then change is timeless, why not Motion also?-
Change, be it noted, is here distinguished from the result of change, the
result being unnecessary to establish the change itself.
- 17. We may be told that neither Act nor Motion requires a genus for
itself, but that both revert to Relation, Act belonging to the potentially
active, Motion to the potentially motive. Our reply is that Relation produces
relatives as such, and not the mere reference to an external standard; given
the existence of a thing, whether attributive or relative, it holds its
essential character prior to any relationship: so then must Act and Motion, and
even such an attribute as habit; they are not prevented from being prior to any
relationship they may occupy, or from being conceivable in themselves.
Otherwise, everything will be relative; for anything you think of- even Soul-
bears some relationship to something else.
- But, to return to activity proper and the action, is there any reason
why these should be referred to Relation? They must in every instance be either
Motion or Act.
- If however activity is referred to Relation and the action made a
distinct genus, why is not Motion referred to Relation and the movement made a
distinct genus? Why not bisect the unity, Motion, and so make Action and
Passion two species of the one thing, ceasing to consider Action and Passion as
two genera?
- 18. There are other questions calling for consideration:
- First: Are both Acts and motions to be included in the category of
Action, with the distinction that Acts are momentary while Motions, such as
cutting, are in time? Or will both be regarded as motions or as involving
Motion?
- Secondly: Will all activities be related to passivity, or will some-
for example, walking and speaking- be considered as independent of it?
- Thirdly: Will all those related to passivity be classed as motions
and the independent as Acts, or will the two classes overlap? Walking, for
instance, which is an independent, would, one supposes, be a motion; thinking,
which also does not essentially involve "passivity," an Act: otherwise we must
hold that thinking and walking are not even actions. But if they are not in the
category of Action, where then in our classification must they fall?
- It may perhaps be urged that the act of thinking, together with the
faculty of thought, should be regarded as relative to the thought object; for
is not the faculty of sensation treated as relative to the sensible object? If
then, we may ask, in the analogue the faculty of sensation is treated as
relative to the sensible object, why not the sensory act as well? The fact is
that even sensation, though related to an external object, has something
besides that relation: it has, namely, its own status of being either an Act or
a Passion. Now the Passion is separable from the condition of being attached to
some object and caused by some object: so, then, is the Act a distinct entity.
Walking is similarly attached and caused, and yet has besides the status of
being a motion. It follows that thought, in addition to its relationship, will
have the status of being either a motion or an Act.
- 19. We have to ask ourselves whether there are not certain Acts which
without the addition of a time-element will be thought of as imperfect and
therefore classed with motions. Take for instance living and life. The life of
a definite person implies a certain adequate period, just as his happiness is
no merely instantaneous thing. Life and happiness are, in other words, of the
nature ascribed to Motion: both therefore must be treated as motions, and
Motion must be regarded as a unity, a single genus; besides the quantity and
quality belonging to Substance we must take count of the motion manifested in
it.
- We may further find desirable to distinguish bodily from psychic
motions or spontaneous motions from those induced by external forces, or the
original from the derivative, the original motions being activities, whether
externally related or independent, while the derivative will be Passions.
- But surely the motions having external tendency are actually
identical with those of external derivation: the cutting issuing from the
cutter and that effected in the object are one, though to cut is not the same
as to be cut.
- Perhaps however the cutting issuing from the cutter and that which
takes place in the cut object are in fact not one, but "to cut" implies that
from a particular Act and motion there results a different motion in the object
cut. Or perhaps the difference [between Action and Passion] lies not in the
fact of being cut, but in the distinct emotion supervening, pain for example:
passivity has this connotation also.
- But when there is no pain, what occurs? Nothing, surely, but the Act
of the agent upon the patient object: this is all that is meant in such cases
by Action. Action, thus, becomes twofold: there is that which occurs in the
external, and that which does not. The duality of Action and Passion, suggested
by the notion that Action [always] takes place in an external, is abandoned.
- Even writing, though taking place upon an external object, does not
call for passivity, since no effect is produced, upon the tablet beyond the Act
of the writer, nothing like pain; we may be told that the tablet has been
inscribed, but this does not suffice for passivity.
- Again, in the case of walking there is the earth trodden upon, but no
one thinks of it as having experienced Passion [or suffering]. Treading on a
living body, we think of suffering, because we reflect not upon the walking but
upon the ensuing pain: otherwise we should think of suffering in the case of
the tablet as well.
- It is so in every case of Action: we cannot but think of it as knit
into a unity with its opposite, Passion. Not that this later "Passion" is the
opposite of Action in the way in which being burned is the opposite of burning:
by Passion in this sense we mean the effect supervening upon the combined facts
of the burning and the being burned, whether this effect be pain or some such
process as withering.
- Suppose this Passion to be treated as of itself producing pain: have
we not still the duality of agent and patient, two results from the one Act?
The Act may no longer include the will to cause pain; but it produces something
distinct from itself, a pain-causing medium which enters into the object about
to experience pain: this medium, while retaining its individuality, produces
something yet different, the feeling of pain.
- What does this suggest? Surely that the very medium- the act of
hearing, for instance- is, even before it produces pain or without producing
pain at all, a Passion of that into which it enters.
- But hearing, with sensation in general, is in fact not a Passion. Yet
to feel pain is to experience a Passion- a Passion however which is not opposed
to Action.
- 20. But though not opposed, it is still different from Action and
cannot belong to the same genus as activity; though if they are both Motion, it
will so belong, on the principle that alteration must be regarded as
qualitative motion.
- Does it follow that whenever alteration proceeds from Quality, it
will be activity and Action, the quale remaining impassive? It may be that if
the quale remains impassive, the alteration will be in the category of Action;
whereas if, while its energy is directed outwards, it also suffers- as in
beating- it will cease to belong to that category: or perhaps there is nothing
to prevent its being in both categories at one and the same moment.
- If then an alteration be conditioned by Passivity alone, as is the
case with rubbing, on what ground is it assigned to Action rather than to
Passivity? Perhaps the Passivity arises from the fact that a counter-rubbing is
involved. But are we, in view of this counter-motion, to recognize the presence
of two distinct motions? No: one only.
- How then can this one motion be both Action and Passion? We must
suppose it to be Action in proceeding from an object, and Passion in being
directly upon another- though it remains the same motion throughout.
- Suppose however Passion to be a different motion from Action: how
then does its modification of the patient object change that patient's
character without the agent being affected by the patient? For obviously an
agent cannot be passive to the operation it performs upon another. Can it be
that the fact of motion existing elsewhere creates the Passion, which was not
Passion in the agent?
- If the whiteness of the swan, produced by its Reason-Principle, is
given at its birth, are we to affirm Passion of the swan on its passing into
being? If, on the contrary, the swan grows white after birth, and if there is a
cause of that growth and the corresponding result, are we to say that the
growth is a Passion? Or must we confine Passion to purely qualitative change?
- One thing confers beauty and another takes it: is that which takes
beauty to be regarded as patient? If then the source of beauty- tin, suppose-
should deteriorate or actually disappear, while the recipient- copper-
improves, are we to think of the copper as passive and the tin active?
- Take the learner: how can he be regarded as passive, seeing that the
Act of the agent passes into him [and becomes his Act]? How can the Act,
necessarily a simple entity, be both Act and Passion? No doubt the Act is not
in itself a Passion; nonetheless, the learner coming to possess it will be a
patient by the fact of his appropriation of an experience from outside: he will
not, of course, be a patient in the sense of having himself performed no Act;
learning- like seeing- is not analogous to being struck, since it involves the
acts of apprehension and recognition.
- 21. How, then, are we to recognise Passivity, since clearly it is not
to be found in the Act from outside which the recipient in turn makes his own?
Surely we must look for it in cases where the patient remains without Act, the
passivity pure.
- Imagine a case where an agent improves, though its Act tends towards
deterioration. Or, say, a a man's activity is guided by evil and is allowed to
dominate another's without restraint. In these cases the Act is clearly wrong,
the Passion blameless.
- What then is the real distinction between Action and Passion? Is it
that Action starts from within and is directed upon an outside object, while
Passion is derived from without and fulfilled within? What, then, are we to say
of such cases as thought and opinion which originate within but are not
directed outwards? Again, the Passion "being heated" rises within the self,
when that self is provoked by an opinion to reflection or to anger, without the
intervention of any external. Still it remains true that Action, whether
self-centred or with external tendency, is a motion rising in the self.
- How then do we explain desire and other forms of aspiration?
Aspiration must be a motion having its origin in the object aspired to, though
some might disallow "origin" and be content with saying that the motion aroused
is subsequent to the object; in what respect, then, does aspiring differ from
taking a blow or being borne down by a thrust?
- Perhaps, however, we should divide aspirations into two classes,
those which follow intellect being described as Actions, the merely impulsive
being Passions. Passivity now will not turn on origin, without or within-
within there can only be deficiency; but whenever a thing, without itself
assisting in the process, undergoes an alteration not directed to the creation
of Being but changing the thing for the worse or not for the better, such an
alteration will be regarded as a Passion and as entailing passivity.
- If however "being heated" means "acquiring heat," and is sometimes
found to contribute to the production of Being and sometimes not, passivity
will be identical with impassivity: besides, "being heated" must then have a
double significance [according as it does or does not contribute to Being].
- The fact is, however, that "being heated," even when it contributes
to Being, involves the presence of a patient [distinct from the being
produced]. Take the case of the bronze which has to be heated and so is a
patient; the being is a statue, which is not heated except accidentally [by the
accident of being contained in the bronze]. If then the bronze becomes more
beautiful as a result of being heated and in the same proportion, it certainly
becomes so by passivity; for passivity must, clearly, take two forms: there is
the passivity which tends to alteration for better or for worse, and there is
the passivity which has neither tendency.
- 22. Passivity, thus, implies the existence within of a motion
functioning somehow or other in the direction of alteration. Action too implies
motion within, whether the motion be aimless or whether it be driven by the
impulse comported by the term "Action" to find its goal in an external object.
There is Motion in both Action and Passion, but the differentia distinguishing
Action from Passion keeps Action impassive, while Passion is recognised by the
fact that a new state replaces the old, though nothing is added to the
essential character of the patient; whenever Being [essential Being] is
produced, the patient remains distinct.
- Thus, what is Action in one relation may be Passion in another. One
same motion will be Action from the point of view of A, Passion from that of B;
for the two are so disposed that they might well be consigned to the category
of Relation- at any rate in the cases where the Action entails a corresponding
Passion: neither correlative is found in isolation; each involves both Action
and Passion, though A acts as mover and B is moved: each then involves two
categories.
- Again, A gives motion to B, B receives it, so that we have a giving
and a receiving- in a word, a relation.
- But a recipient must possess what it has received. A thing is
admitted to possess its natural colour: why not its motion also? Besides,
independent motions such as walking and thought do, in fact, involve the
possession of the powers respectively to walk and to think.
- We are reminded to enquire whether thought in the form of providence
constitutes Action; to be subject to providence is apparently Passion, for such
thought is directed to an external, the object of the providential arrangement.
But it may well be that neither is the exercise of providence an action, even
though the thought is concerned with an external, nor subjection to it a
Passion. Thought itself need not be an action, for it does not go outward
towards its object but remains self-gathered. It is not always an activity; all
Acts need not be definable as activities, for they need not produce an effect;
activity belongs to Act only accidentally.
- Does it follow that if a man as he walks produces footprints, he
cannot be considered to have performed an action? Certainly as a result of his
existing something distinct from himself has come into being. Yet perhaps we
should regard both action and Act as merely accidental, because he did not aim
at this result: it would be as we speak of Action even in things inanimate-
"fire heats," "the drug worked."
- So much for Action and Passion.
- 23. As for Possession, if the term is used comprehensively, why are
not all its modes to be brought under one category? Possession, thus, would
include the quantum as possessing magnitude, the quale as possessing colour; it
would include fatherhood and the complementary relationships, since the father
possesses the son and the son possesses the father: in short, it would include
all belongings.
- If, on the contrary, the category of Possession comprises only the
things of the body, such as weapons and shoes, we first ask why this should be
so, and why their possession produces a single category, while burning,
cutting, burying or casting them out do not give another or others. If it is
because these things are carried on the person, then one's mantle lying on a
couch will come under a different category from that of the mantle covering the
person. If the ownership of possession suffices, then clearly one must refer to
the one category of Possession all objects identified by being possessed, every
case in which possession can be established; the character of the possessed
object will make no difference.
- If however Possession is not to be predicated of Quality because
Quality stands recognised as a category, nor of Quantity because the category
of Quantity has been received, nor of parts because they have been assigned to
the category of Substance, why should we predicate Possession of weapons, when
they too are comprised in the accepted category of Substance? Shoes and weapons
are clearly substances.
- How, further, is "He possesses weapons," signifying as it does that
the action of arming has been performed by a subject, to be regarded as an
entirely simple notion, assignable to a single category?
- Again, is Possession to be restricted to an animate possessor, or
does it hold good even of a statue as possessing the objects above mentioned?
The animate and inanimate seem to possess in different ways, and the term is
perhaps equivocal. Similarly, "standing" has not the same connotation as
applied to the animate and the inanimate.
- Besides, how can it be reasonable for what is found only in a limited
number of cases to form a distinct generic category?
- 24. There remains Situation, which like Possession is confined to a
few instances such as reclining and sitting.
- Even so, the term is not used without qualification: we say "they are
placed in such and such a manner," "he is situated in such and such a
position." The position is added from outside the genus.
- In short, Situation signifies "being in a place"; there are two
things involved, the position and the place: why then must two categories be
combined into one?
- Moreover, if sitting signifies an Act, it must be classed among Acts;
if a Passion, it goes under the category to which belong Passions complete and
incomplete.
- Reclining is surely nothing but "lying up," and tallies with "lying
down" and "lying midway." But if the reclining belongs thus to the category of
Relation, why not the recliner also? For as "on the right" belongs to the
Relations, so does "the thing on the right"; and similarly with "the thing on
the left."
- 25. There are those who lay down four categories and make a fourfold
division into Substrates, Qualities, States, and Relative States, and find in
these a common Something, and so include everything in one genus.
- Against this theory there is much to be urged, but particularly
against this posing of a common Something and a single all-embracing genus.
This Something, it may be submitted, is unintelligible to themselves, is
indefinable, and does not account either for bodies or for the bodiless.
Moreover, no room is left for a differentia by which this Something may be
distinguished. Besides, this common Something is either existent or
non-existent: if existent, it must be one or other of its [four] species;- if
non-existent, the existent is classed under the non-existent. But the
objections are countless; we must leave them for the present and consider the
several heads of the division.
- To the first genus are assigned Substrates, including Matter, to
which is given a priority over the others; so that what is ranked as the first
principle comes under the same head with things which must be posterior to it
since it is their principle.
- First, then: the prior is made homogeneous with the subsequent. Now
this is impossible: in this relation the subsequent owes its existence to the
prior, whereas among things belonging to one same genus each must have,
essentially, the equality implied by the genus; for the very meaning of genus
is to be predicated of the species in respect of their essential character. And
that Matter is the basic source of all the rest of things, this school, we may
suppose, would hardly deny.
- Secondly: since they treat the Substrate as one thing, they do not
enumerate the Existents; they look instead for principles of the Existents.
There is however a difference between speaking of the actual Existents and of
their principles.
- If Matter is taken to be the only Existent, and all other things as
modifications of Matter, it is not legitimate to set up a single genus to
embrace both the Existent and the other things; consistency requires that Being
[Substance] be distinguished from its modifications and that these
modifications be duly classified.
- Even the distinction which this theory makes between Substrates and
the rest of things is questionable. The Substrate is [necessarily] one thing
and admits of no differentia- except perhaps in so far as it is split up like
one mass into its various parts; and yet not even so, since the notion of Being
implies continuity: it would be better, therefore, to speak of the Substrate,
in the singular.
- 26. But the error in this theory is fundamental. To set Matter the
potential above everything, instead of recognising the primacy of actuality, is
in the highest degree perverse. If the potential holds the primacy among the
Existents, its actualization becomes impossible; it certainly cannot bring
itself into actuality: either the actual exists previously, and so the
potential is not the first-principle, or, if the two are to be regarded as
existing simultaneously, the first-principles must be attributed to hazard.
Besides, if they are simultaneous, why is not actuality given the primacy? Why
is the potential more truly real than the actual?
- Supposing however that the actual does come later than the potential,
how must the theory proceed? Obviously Matter does not produce Form: the
unqualified does not produce Quality, nor does actuality take its origin in the
potential; for that would mean that the actual was inherent in the potential,
which at once becomes a dual thing.
- Furthermore, God becomes a secondary to Matter, inasmuch as even he
is regarded as a body composed of Matter and Form- though how he acquires the
Form is not revealed. If however he be admitted to exist apart from Matter in
virtue of his character as a principle and a rational law [logos], God will be
bodiless, the Creative Power bodiless. If we are told that he is without Matter
but is composite in essence by the fact of being a body, this amounts to
introducing another Matter, the Matter of God.
- Again, how can Matter be a first-principle, seeing that it is body?
Body must necessarily be a plurality, since all bodies are composite of Matter
and Quality. If however body in this case is to be understood in some different
way, then Matter is identified with body only by an equivocation.
- If the possession of three dimensions is given as the characteristic
of body, then we are dealing simply with mathematical body. If resistance is
added, we are no longer considering a unity: besides, resistance is a quality
or at least derived from Quality.
- And whence is this resistance supposed to come? Whence the three
dimensions? What is the source of their existence? Matter is not comprised in
the concept of the three-dimensional, nor the three-dimensional in the concept
of Matter; if Matter partakes thus of extension, it can no longer be a simplex.
- Again, whence does Matter derive its unifying power? It is assuredly
not the Absolute Unity, but has only that of participation in Unity.
- We inevitably conclude that Mass or Extension cannot be ranked as the
first of things; Non-Extension and Unity must be prior. We must begin with the
One and conclude with the Many, proceed to magnitude from that which is free
from magnitude: a One is necessary to the existence of a Many, Non-Magnitude to
that of Magnitude. Magnitude is a unity not by being Unity-Absolute, but by
participation and in an accidental mode: there must be a primary and absolute
preceding the accidental, or the accidental relation is left unexplained.
- The manner of this relation demands investigation. Had this been
undertaken, the thinkers of this school would probably have lighted upon that
Unity which is not accidental but essential and underived.
- 27. On other grounds also, it is indefensible not to have reserved
the high place for the true first-principle of things but to have set up in its
stead the formless, passive and lifeless, the irrational, dark and
indeterminate, and to have made this the source of Being. In this theory God is
introduced merely for the sake of appearance: deriving existence from Matter he
is a composite, a derivative, or, worse, a mere state of Matter.
- Another consideration is that, if Matter is a substrate, there must
be something outside it, which, acting on it and distinct from it, makes it the
substrate of what is poured into it. But if God is lodged in Matter and by
being involved in Matter is himself no more than a substrate, he will no longer
make Matter a substrate nor be himself a substrate in conjunction with Matter.
For of what will they be substrates, when that which could make them substrates
is eliminated? This so-called substrate turns out to have swallowed up all that
is; but a substrate must be relative, and relative not to its content but to
something which acts upon it as upon a datum.
- Again, the substrate comports a relation to that which is not
substrate; hence, to something external to it: there must, then, be something
apart from the substrate. If nothing distinct and external is considered
necessary, but the substrate itself can become everything and adopt every
character, like the versatile dancer in the pantomime, it ceases to be a
substrate: it is, essentially, everything. The mime is not a substrate of the
characters he puts on; these are in fact the realisation of his own
personality: similarly, if the Matter with which this theory presents us
comports in its own being all the realities, it is no longer the substrate of
all: on the contrary, the other things can have no reality whatever, if they
are no more than states of Matter in the sense that the poses of the mime are
states through which he passes.
- Then, those other things not existing, Matter will not be a
substrate, nor will it have a place among the Existents; it will be Matter
bare, and for that reason not even Matter, since Matter is a relative. The
relative is relative to something else: it must, further, be homogeneous with
that something else: double is relative to half, but not Substance to double.
- How then can an Existent be relative to a Non-existent, except
accidentally? But the True-Existent, or Matter, is related (to what emerges
from it) as Existent to Non-Existent. For if potentiality is that which holds
the promise of existence and that promise does not constitute Reality, the
potentiality cannot be a Reality. In sum, these very teachers who deprecate the
production of Realities from Nonrealities, themselves produce Non-reality from
Reality; for to them the universe as such is not a Reality.
- But is it not a paradox that, while Matter, the Substrate, is to them
an existence, bodies should not have more claim to existence, the universe yet
more, and not merely a claim grounded on the reality of one of its parts?
- It is no less paradoxical that the living form should owe existence
not to its soul but to its Matter only, the soul being but an affection of
Matter and posterior to it. From what source then did Matter receive
ensoulment? Whence, in short, is soul's entity derived? How does it occur that
Matter sometimes turns into bodies, while another part of it turns into Soul?
Even supposing that Form might come to it from elsewhere, that accession of
Quality to Matter would account not for Soul, but simply for organized body
soulless. If, on the contrary, there is something which both moulds Matter and
produces Soul, then prior to the produced there must be Soul the producer.
- 28. Many as are the objections to this theory, we pass on for fear of
the ridicule we might incur by arguing against a position itself so manifestly
ridiculous. We may be content with pointing out that it assigns the primacy to
the Non-existent and treats it as the very summit of Existence: in short, it
places the last thing first. The reason for this procedure lies in the
acceptance of sense-perception as a trustworthy guide to first-principles and
to all other entities.
- This philosophy began by identifying the Real with body; then,
viewing with apprehension the transmutations of bodies, decided that Reality
was that which is permanent beneath the superficial changes- which is much as
if one regarded space as having more title to Reality than the bodies within
it, on the principle that space does not perish with them. They found a
permanent in space, but it was a fault to take mere permanence as in itself a
sufficient definition of the Real; the right method would have been to consider
what properties must characterize Reality, by the presence of which properties
it has also that of unfailing permanence. Thus if a shadow had permanence,
accompanying an object through every change, that would not make it more real
than the object itself. The sensible universe, as including the Substrate and a
multitude of attributes, will thus have more claim to be Reality entire than
has any one of its component entities (such as Matter): and if the sensible
were in very truth the whole of Reality, Matter, the mere base and not the
total, could not be that whole.
- Most surprising of all is that, while they make sense-perception
their guarantee of everything, they hold that the Real cannot be grasped by
sensation;- for they have no right to assign to Matter even so much as
resistance, since resistance is a quality. If however they profess to grasp
Reality by Intellect, is it not a strange Intellect which ranks Matter above
itself, giving Reality to Matter and not to itself? And as their "Intellect"
has, thus, no Real-Existence, how can it be trustworthy when it speaks of
things higher than itself, things to which it has no affinity whatever?
- But an adequate treatment of this entity [Matter] and of substrates
will be found elsewhere.
- 29. Qualities must be for this school distinct from Substrates. This
in fact they acknowledge by counting them as the second category. If then they
form a distinct category, they must be simplex; that is to say they are not
composite; that is to say that as qualities, pure and simple, they are devoid
of Matter: hence they are bodiless and active, since Matter is their substrate-
a relation of passivity.
- If however they hold Qualities to be composite, that is a strange
classification which first contrasts simple and composite qualities, then
proceeds to include them in one genus, and finally includes one of the two
species [simple] in the other [composite]; it is like dividing knowledge into
two species, the first comprising grammatical knowledge, the second made up of
grammatical and other knowledge.
- Again, if they identify Qualities with qualifications of Matter, then
in the first place even their Seminal Principles [Logoi] will be material and
will not have to reside in Matter to produce a composite, but prior to the
composite thus produced they will themselves be composed of Matter and Form: in
other words, they will not be Forms or Principles. Further, if they maintain
that the Seminal Principles are nothing but Matter in a certain state, they
evidently identify Qualities with States, and should accordingly classify them
in their fourth genus. If this is a state of some peculiar kind, what precisely
is its differentia? Clearly the state by its association with Matter receives
an accession of Reality: yet if that means that when divorced from Matter it is
not a Reality, how can State be treated as a single genus or species? Certainly
one genus cannot embrace the Existent and the Non-existent.
- And what is this state implanted in Matter? It is either real, or
unreal: if real, absolutely bodiless: if unreal, it is introduced to no
purpose; Matter is all there is; Quality therefore is nothing. The same is true
of State, for that is even more unreal; the alleged Fourth Category more so.
- Matter then is the sole Reality. But how do we come to know this?
Certainly not from Matter itself. How, then? From Intellect? But Intellect is
merely a state of Matter, and even the "state" is an empty qualification. We
are left after all with Matter alone competent to make these assertions, to
fathom these problems. And if its assertions were intelligent, we must wonder
how it thinks and performs the functions of Soul without possessing either
Intellect or Soul. If, then, it were to make foolish assertions, affirming
itself to be what it is not and cannot be, to what should we ascribe this
folly? Doubtless to Matter, if it was in truth Matter that spoke. But Matter
does not speak; anyone who says that it does proclaims the predominance of
Matter in himself; he may have a soul, but he is utterly devoid of Intellect,
and lives in ignorance of himself and of the faculty alone capable of uttering
the truth in these things.
- 30. With regard to States:
- It may seem strange that States should be set up as a third class- or
whatever class it is- since all States are referable to Matter. We shall be
told that there is a difference among States, and that a State as in Matter has
definite characteristics distinguishing it from all other States and further
that, whereas Qualities are States of Matter, States properly so-called belong
to Qualities. But if Qualities are nothing but States of Matter, States [in the
strict sense of the term] are ultimately reducible to Matter, and under Matter
they must be classed.
- Further, how can States constitute a single genus, when there is such
manifold diversity among them? How can we group together three yards long" and
"white"- Quantity and Quality respectively? Or again Time and Place? How can
"yesterday," "last year," "in the Lyceum," "in the Academy," be States at all?
How can Time be in any sense a State? Neither is Time a State nor the events in
Time, neither the objects in Space nor Space itself.
- And how can Action be a State? One acting is not in a state of being
but in a state of Action, or rather in Action simply: no state is involved.
Similarly, what is predicated of the patient is not a state of being but a
state of Passion, or strictly, Passion unqualified by state.
- But it would seem that State was the right category at least for
cases of Situation and Possession: yet Possession does not imply possession of
some particular state, but is Possession absolute.
- As for the Relative State, if the theory does not include it in the
same genus as the other States, another question arises: we must enquire
whether any actuality is attributed to this particular type of relation, for to
many types actuality is denied.
- It is, moreover, absurd that an entity which depends upon the prior
existence of other entities should be classed in the same genus with those
priors: one and two must, clearly, exist, before half and double can.
- The various speculations on the subject of the Existents and the
principles of the Existents, whether they have entailed an infinite or a finite
number, bodily or bodiless, or even supposed the Composite to be the Authentic
Existent, may well be considered separately with the help of the criticisms
made by the ancients upon them.
Essene Nazarean Church of Mount Carmel
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