Aristotle
Posterior Analytics
Translated by G. R. G. Mure
71a1 ALL instruction given or
received by way of argument proceeds from pre-existent knowledge. This becomes
evident upon a survey of all the species of such instruction.
71a3 The mathematical sciences and all other
speculative disciplines are acquired in this way,
71a4 and so are the two forms of dialectical reasoning, syllogistic
and inductive; for each of these latter make use of old knowledge to impart new,
the syllogism assuming an audience that accepts its premisses, induction
exhibiting the universal as implicit in the clearly known particular.
71a8 Again, the persuasion exerted by
rhetorical arguments is in principle the same, since they use either example, a
kind of induction, or enthymeme, a form of syllogism.
71a11 The pre-existent knowledge required is of two kinds. In some
cases admission of the fact must be assumed, in others comprehension of the
meaning of the term used, and sometimes both assumptions are essential. Thus, we
assume that every predicate can be either truly affirmed or truly denied of any
subject, and that ‘triangle’ means so and so; as regards ‘unit’ we have to make
the double assumption of the meaning of the word and the existence of the thing.
The reason is that these several objects are not equally obvious to us.
71a16 Recognition of a truth may in some
cases contain as factors both previous knowledge and also knowledge acquired
simultaneously with that recognition-knowledge, this latter, of the particulars
actually falling under the universal and therein already virtually known. For
example, the student knew beforehand that the angles of every triangle are equal
to two right angles; but it was only at the actual moment at which he was being
led on to recognize this as true in the instance before him that he came to know
‘this figure inscribed in the semicircle’ to be a triangle. For some things
(viz. the singulars finally reached which are not predicable of anything else as
subject) are only learnt in this way, i.e. there is here no recognition through
a middle of a minor term as subject to a major.
71a24 Before he was led on to recognition or before he actually drew
a conclusion, we should perhaps say that in a manner he knew, in a manner not.
If he did not in an unqualified sense of the term know the existence of this
triangle, how could he know without qualification that its angles were equal to
two right angles? No: clearly he knows not without qualification but only in the
sense that he knows universally.
71a28 If
this distinction is not drawn, we are faced with the dilemma in the Meno: either
a man will learn nothing or what he already knows;
71a30 for we cannot accept the solution which some people offer. A
man is asked, ‘Do you, or do you not, know that every pair is even?’ He says he
does know it. The questioner then produces a particular pair, of the existence,
and so a fortiori of the evenness, of which he was unaware. The solution which
some people offer is to assert that they do not know that every pair is even,
but only that everything which they know to be a pair is even:
71b1 yet what they know to be even is that of
which they have demonstrated evenness, i.e. what they made the subject of their
premiss, viz. not merely every triangle or number which they know to be such,
but any and every number or triangle without reservation. For no premiss is ever
couched in the form ‘every number which you know to be such’, or ‘every
rectilinear figure which you know to be such’: the predicate is always construed
as applicable to any and every instance of the thing.
71b5 On the other hand, I imagine there is nothing to prevent a man
in one sense knowing what he is learning, in another not knowing it. The strange
thing would be, not if in some sense he knew what he was learning, but if he
were to know it in that precise sense and manner in which he was learning it.
2 71b8 We suppose ourselves to possess
unqualified scientific knowledge of a thing, as opposed to knowing it in the
accidental way in which the sophist knows, b10 when
we think that we know the cause on which the fact depends, as the cause of that
fact and of no other, and, further, that the fact could not be other than it is.
71b12 Now that scientific knowing is
something of this sort is evident-witness both those who falsely claim it and
those who actually possess it, since the former merely imagine themselves to be,
while the latter are also actually, in the condition described.
71b14 Consequently the proper object of
unqualified scientific knowledge is something which cannot be other than it
is.
71b16 There may be another manner of
knowing as well-that will be discussed later.
71b17 What I now assert is that at all events we do know by
demonstration.
71b18 By demonstration I mean
71b19 a syllogism productive of scientific
knowledge, a syllogism, that is, the grasp of which is eo ipso such knowledge.
71b20 Assuming then that my thesis as to the
nature of scientific knowing is correct, the premisses of demonstrated knowledge
must be true, primary, immediate, better known than and prior to the conclusion,
which is further related to them as effect to cause.
71b22 Unless these conditions are satisfied, the basic truths will
not be ‘appropriate’ to the conclusion.
71b23 Syllogism there may indeed be without these conditions, but
such syllogism, not being productive of scientific knowledge, will not be
demonstration.
71b24 The premisses must be
true: for that which is non-existent cannot be known-we cannot know, e.g. that
the diagonal of a square is commensurate with its side.
71b27 The premisses must be primary and indemonstrable; otherwise
they will require demonstration in order to be known, since to have knowledge,
if it be not accidental knowledge, of things which are demonstrable, means
precisely to have a demonstration of them.
71b29 The premisses must be the causes of the conclusion, better
known than it, and prior to it; its causes, since we possess scientific
knowledge of a thing only when we know its cause; prior, in order to be causes;
antecedently known, this antecedent knowledge being not our mere understanding
of the meaning, but knowledge of the fact as well. Now ‘prior’ and ‘better
known’ are ambiguous terms, for there is a difference between what is prior and
better known in the order of being and what is prior and better known to man. I
mean that objects nearer to sense are prior and better known to man; objects
without qualification prior and better known are those further from sense. Now
the most universal causes are furthest from sense and particular causes are
nearest to sense, and they are thus exactly opposed to one another. In saying
that the premisses of demonstrated knowledge must be primary, I mean that they
must be the ‘appropriate’ basic truths, for I identify primary premiss and basic
truth.
72a8 A ‘basic truth’ in a demonstration
is an immediate proposition. An immediate proposition is one which has no other
proposition prior to it.
72a9 A proposition is
either part of an enunciation, i.e. it predicates a single attribute of a single
subject.
72a10 If a proposition is
dialectical, it assumes either part indifferently; if it is demonstrative, it
lays down one part to the definite exclusion of the other because that part is
true.
72a11 The term ‘enunciation’ denotes
either part of a contradiction indifferently. A contradiction is an opposition
which of its own nature excludes a middle. The part of a contradiction which
conjoins a predicate with a subject is an affirmation; the part disjoining them
is a negation.
72a15 I call an immediate
basic truth of syllogism a ‘thesis’ when, though it is not susceptible of proof
by the teacher, yet ignorance of it does not constitute a total bar to progress
on the part of the pupil: one which the pupil must know if he is to learn
anything whatever is an axiom. I call it an axiom because there are such truths
and we give them the name of axioms par excellence.
72a19 If a thesis assumes one part or the other of an enunciation,
i.e. asserts either the existence or the non-existence of a subject, it is a
hypothesis; if it does not so assert, it is a definition. Definition is a
‘thesis’ or a ‘laying something down’, since the arithmetician lays it down that
to be a unit is to be quantitatively indivisible; but it is not a hypothesis,
for to define what a unit is is not the same as to affirm its
existence.
72a25 Now since the required ground
of our knowledge-i.e. of our conviction-of a fact is the possession of such a
syllogism as we call demonstration, and the ground of the syllogism is the facts
constituting its premisses, we must not only know the primary premisses-some if
not all of them-beforehand, but know them better than the conclusion:
72a28 for the cause of an attribute’s
inherence in a subject always itself inheres in the subject more firmly than
that attribute; e.g. the cause of our loving anything is dearer to us than the
object of our love. So since the primary premisses are the cause of our
knowledge-i.e. of our conviction-it follows that we know them better-that is,
are more convinced of them-than their consequences, precisely because of our
knowledge of the latter is the effect of our knowledge of the premisses.
72a33 Now a man cannot believe in anything
more than in the things he knows, unless he has either actual knowledge of it or
something better than actual knowledge. But we are faced with this paradox if a
student whose belief rests on demonstration has not prior knowledge; a36a man
must believe in some, if not in all, of the basic truths more than in the
conclusion. Moreover, if a man sets out to acquire the scientific knowledge that
comes through demonstration,
72a38 he must
not only have a better knowledge of the basic truths and a firmer conviction of
them than of the connexion which is being demonstrated: more than this, nothing
must be more certain or better known to him than these basic truths in their
character as contradicting the fundamental premisses which lead to the opposed
and erroneous conclusion. For indeed the conviction of pure science must be
unshakable.
3 72b5 Some hold that, owing to the
necessity of knowing the primary premisses, there is no scientific knowledge.
Others think there is, but that all truths are demonstrable. Neither doctrine is
either true or a necessary deduction from the premisses.
72b8 The first school, assuming that there is no way of knowing other
than by demonstration, maintain that an infinite regress is involved, on the
ground that if behind the prior stands no primary, we could not know the
posterior through the prior (wherein they are right, for one cannot traverse an
infinite series): if on the other hand-they say-the series terminates and there
are primary premisses, yet these are unknowable because incapable of
demonstration, which according to them is the only form of knowledge. And since
thus one cannot know the primary premisses, knowledge of the conclusions which
follow from them is not pure scientific knowledge nor properly knowing at all,
but rests on the mere supposition that the premisses are true.
72b15 The other party agree with them as
regards knowing, holding that it is only possible by demonstration, but they see
no difficulty in holding that all truths are demonstrated, on the ground that
demonstration may be circular and reciprocal.
72b18 Our own doctrine is that not all knowledge is demonstrative: on
the contrary, knowledge of the immediate premisses is independent of
demonstration. (The necessity of this is obvious; for since we must know the
prior premisses from which the demonstration is drawn, and since the regress
must end in immediate truths, those truths must be indemonstrable.) Such, then,
is our doctrine, and in addition we maintain that besides scientific knowledge
there is its originative source which enables us to recognize the
definitions.
72b25 Now demonstration must be
based on premisses prior to and better known than the conclusion; and the same
things cannot simultaneously be both prior and posterior to one another: so
circular demonstration is clearly not possible in the unqualified sense of
‘demonstration’, but only possible if ‘demonstration’ be extended to include
that other method of argument which rests on a distinction between truths prior
to us and truths without qualification prior, i.e. the method by which induction
produces knowledge. But if we accept this extension of its meaning, our
definition of unqualified knowledge will prove faulty; for there seem to be two
kinds of it. Perhaps, however, the second form of demonstration, that which
proceeds from truths better known to us, is not demonstration in the unqualified
sense of the term.
72b33 The advocates of
circular demonstration are not only faced with the difficulty we have just
stated: in addition their theory reduces to the mere statement that if a thing
exists, then it does exist-an easy way of proving anything. That this is so can
be clearly shown by taking three terms, for to constitute the circle it makes no
difference whether many terms or few or even only two are taken.
72b38 Thus by direct proof, if A is, B must
be; if B is, C must be; therefore if A is, C must be.
73a1 Since then-by the circular proof-if A is, B must be, and if B
is, A must be, A may be substituted for C above. Then ‘if B is, A must be’=’if B
is, C must be’, which above gave the conclusion ‘if A is, C must be’: but C and
A have been identified. Consequently the upholders of circular demonstration are
in the position of saying that if A is, A must be-a simple way of proving
anything.
73a6 Moreover, even such circular
demonstration is impossible except in the case of attributes that imply one
another, viz. ‘peculiar’ properties. Now, it has been shown that the positing of
one thing-be it one term or one premiss-never involves a necessary consequent:
two premisses constitute the first and smallest foundation for drawing a
conclusion at all and therefore a fortiori for the demonstrative syllogism of
science. If, then, A is implied in B and C, and B and C are reciprocally implied
in one another and in A, it is possible, as has been shown in my writings on the
syllogism, to prove all the assumptions on which the original conclusion rested,
by circular demonstration in the first figure. But it has also been shown that
in the other figures either no conclusion is possible, or at least none which
proves both the original premisses. Propositions the terms of which are not
convertible cannot be circularly demonstrated at all, and since convertible
terms occur rarely in actual demonstrations, it is clearly frivolous and
impossible to say that demonstration is reciprocal and that therefore everything
can be demonstrated.
4 73a2l Since the object
of pure scientific knowledge cannot be other than it is, the truth obtained by
demonstrative knowledge will be necessary. And since demonstrative knowledge is
only present when we have a demonstration, it follows that demonstration is an
inference from necessary premisses. So we must consider what are the premisses
of demonstration-i.e. what is their character:
73a25 and as a preliminary, let us define what we mean by an
attribute ‘true in every instance of its subject’, an ‘essential’ attribute, and
a ‘commensurate and universal’ attribute.
73a28 I call ‘true in every instance’ what is truly predicable of all
instances-not of one to the exclusion of others-and at all times, not at this or
that time only; e.g. if animal is truly predicable of every instance of man,
then if it be true to say ‘this is a man’, ‘this is an animal’ is also true, and
if the one be true now the other is true now. A corresponding account holds if
point is in every instance predicable as contained in line.
73a32
There is evidence for this in the fact that the objection we
raise against a proposition put to us as true in every instance is either an
instance in which, or an occasion on which, it is not true.
73a34
Essential attributes are (1) such as belong to their subject
as elements in its essential nature (e.g. line thus belongs to triangle, point
to line; for the very being or ‘substance’ of triangle and line is composed of
these elements, which are contained in the formulae defining triangle and line):
73a38 (2) such that, while they belong to
certain subjects, the subjects to which they belong are contained in the
attribute’s own defining formula. Thus straight and curved belong to line, odd
and even, prime and compound, square and oblong, to number; and also the formula
defining any one of these attributes contains its subject-e.g. line or number as
the case may be. Extending this classification to all other attributes, I
distinguish those that answer the above description as belonging essentially to
their respective subjects; whereas attributes related in neither of these two
ways to their subjects I call accidents or ‘coincidents’; e.g. musical or white
is a ‘coincident’ of animal.
73b5 Further (a)
that is essential which is not predicated of a subject other than itself: e.g.
‘the walking [thing]’ walks and is white in virtue of being something else
besides; whereas substance, in the sense of whatever signifies a ‘this
somewhat’, is not what it is in virtue of being something else besides. Things,
then, not predicated of a subject I call essential; things predicated of a
subject I call accidental or ‘coincidental’.
73b10 In another sense again (b) a thing consequentially connected
with anything is essential; one not so connected is ‘coincidental’. An example
of the latter is ‘While he was walking it lightened’: the lightning was not due
to his walking; it was, we should say, a coincidence. If, on the other hand,
there is a consequential connexion, the predication is essential; e.g. if a
beast dies when its throat is being cut, then its death is also essentially
connected with the cutting, because the cutting was the cause of death, not
death a ‘coincident’ of the cutting.
73b16 So
far then as concerns the sphere of connexions scientifically known in the
unqualified sense of that term, all attributes which (within that sphere) are
essential either in the sense that their subjects are contained in them, or in
the sense that they are contained in their subjects, are necessary as well as
consequentially connected with their subjects. For it is impossible for them not
to inhere in their subjects either simply or in the qualified sense that one or
other of a pair of opposites must inhere in the subject; e.g. in line must be
either straightness or curvature, in number either oddness or evenness. For
within a single identical genus the contrary of a given attribute is either its
privative or its contradictory; e.g. within number what is not odd is even,
inasmuch as within this sphere even is a necessary consequent of not-odd. So,
since any given predicate must be either affirmed or denied of any subject,
essential attributes must inhere in their subjects of
necessity.
73b25 Thus, then, we have
established the distinction between the attribute which is ‘true in every
instance’ and the ‘essential’ attribute.
73b27 I term ‘commensurately universal’ an attribute which belongs to
every instance of its subject, and to every instance essentially and as such;
b28from which it clearly follows that all commensurate universals inhere
necessarily in their subjects.
73b29 The
essential attribute, and the attribute that belongs to its subject as such, are
identical. E.g. point and straight belong to line essentially, for they belong
to line as such; and triangle as such has two right angles, for it is
essentially equal to two right angles.
73b32 An attribute belongs commensurately and universally to a
subject when it can be shown to belong to any random instance of that subject
and when the subject is the first thing to which it can be shown to belong.
73b34 Thus, e.g. (1) the equality of its
angles to two right angles is not a commensurately universal attribute of
figure. For though it is possible to show that a figure has its angles equal to
two right angles, this attribute cannot be demonstrated of any figure selected
at haphazard, nor in demonstrating does one take a figure at random-a square is
a figure but its angles are not equal to two right angles. On the other hand,
any isosceles triangle has its angles equal to two right angles, yet isosceles
triangle is not the primary subject of this attribute but triangle is prior. So
whatever can be shown to have its angles equal to two right angles, or to
possess any other attribute, in any random instance of itself and primarily-that
is the first subject to which the predicate in question belongs commensurately
and universally,
74a1 and the demonstration,
in the essential sense, of any predicate is the proof of it as belonging to this
first subject commensurately and universally: while the proof of it as belonging
to the other subjects to which it attaches is demonstration only in a secondary
and unessential sense. Nor again (2) is equality to two right angles a
commensurately universal attribute of isosceles; it is of wider
application.
5 74a4 We must not fail to observe
that we often fall into error because our conclusion is not in fact primary and
commensurately universal in the sense in which we think we prove it so.
74a6 We make this mistake (1) when the subject
is an individual or individuals above which there is no universal to be found:
(2) when the subjects belong to different species and there is a higher
universal, but it has no name: (3) when the subject which the demonstrator takes
as a whole is really only a part of a larger whole; for then the demonstration
will be true of the individual instances within the part and will hold in every
instance of it, yet the demonstration will not be true of this subject primarily
and commensurately and universally. When a demonstration is true of a subject
primarily and commensurately and universally, that is to be taken to mean that
it is true of a given subject primarily and as such.
74a13 Case (3) may be thus exemplified. If a proof were given that
perpendiculars to the same line are parallel, it might be supposed that lines
thus perpendicular were the proper subject of the demonstration because being
parallel is true of every instance of them. But it is not so, for the
parallelism depends not on these angles being equal to one another because each
is a right angle, but simply on their being equal to one another.
74a17 An example of (1) would be as follows:
if isosceles were the only triangle, it would be thought to have its angles
equal to two right angles qua isosceles.
74a18 An instance of (2) would be the law that proportionals
alternate. Alternation used to be demonstrated separately of numbers, lines,
solids, and durations, though it could have been proved of them all by a single
demonstration. Because there was no single name to denote that in which numbers,
lengths, durations, and solids are identical, and because they differed
specifically from one another, this property was proved of each of them
separately. To-day, however, the proof is commensurately universal, for they do
not possess this attribute qua lines or qua numbers, but qua manifesting this
generic character which they are postulated as possessing universally.
74a25 Hence, even if one prove of each kind
of triangle that its angles are equal to two right angles, whether by means of
the same or different proofs; still, as long as one treats separately
equilateral, scalene, and isosceles, one does not yet know, except
sophistically, that triangle has its angles equal to two right angles, nor does
one yet know that triangle has this property commensurately and universally,
even if there is no other species of triangle but these. For one does not know
that triangle as such has this property, nor even that ‘all’ triangles have
it-unless ‘all’ means ‘each taken singly’: if ‘all’ means ‘as a whole class’,
then, though there be none in which one does not recognize this property, one
does not know it of ‘all triangles’.
74a33 When, then, does our knowledge fail of commensurate
universality, and when it is unqualified knowledge? If triangle be identical in
essence with equilateral, i.e. with each or all equilaterals, then clearly we
have unqualified knowledge: if on the other hand it be not, and the attribute
belongs to equilateral qua triangle; then our knowledge fails of commensurate
universality.
74a35 ‘But’, it will be asked,
‘does this attribute belong to the subject of which it has been demonstrated qua
triangle or qua isosceles? What is the point at which the subject. to which it
belongs is primary? (i.e. to what subject can it be demonstrated as belonging
commensurately and universally?)’ Clearly this point is the first term in which
it is found to inhere as the elimination of inferior differentiae proceeds. Thus
the angles of a brazen isosceles triangle are equal to two right angles: but
eliminate brazen and isosceles and the attribute remains. ‘But’-you may
say-’eliminate figure or limit, and the attribute vanishes.’ True, but figure
and limit are not the first differentiae whose elimination destroys the
attribute. ‘Then what is the first?’ If it is triangle, it will be in virtue of
triangle that the attribute belongs to all the other subjects of which it is
predicable, and triangle is the subject to which it can be demonstrated as
belonging commensurately and universally.
6 74b5 Demonstrative knowledge must rest on necessary basic truths; for
the object of scientific knowledge cannot be other than it is.
74b6 Now attributes attaching essentially to
their subjects attach necessarily to them: for essential attributes are either
elements in the essential nature of their subjects, or contain their subjects as
elements in their own essential nature. (The pairs of opposites which the latter
class includes are necessary because one member or the other necessarily
inheres.) It follows from this that premisses of the demonstrative syllogism
must be connexions essential in the sense explained: for all attributes must
inhere essentially or else be accidental, and accidental attributes are not
necessary to their subjects.
74b13 We must
either state the case thus, or else premise that the conclusion of demonstration
is necessary and that a demonstrated conclusion cannot be other than it is, and
then infer that the conclusion must be developed from necessary premisses. For
though you may reason from true premisses without demonstrating, yet if your
premisses are necessary you will assuredly demonstrate-in such necessity you
have at once a distinctive character of demonstration.
74b18 That demonstration proceeds from necessary premisses is also
indicated by the fact that the objection we raise against a professed
demonstration is that a premiss of it is not a necessary truth-whether we think
it altogether devoid of necessity, or at any rate so far as our opponent’s
previous argument goes.
74b22 This shows how
naive it is to suppose one’s basic truths rightly chosen if one starts with a
proposition which is (1) popularly accepted and (2) true, such as the sophists’
assumption that to know is the same as to possess knowledge. For (1) popular
acceptance or rejection is no criterion of a basic truth, which can only be the
primary law of the genus constituting the subject matter of the demonstration;
and (2) not all truth is ‘appropriate’.
74b27 A further proof that the conclusion must be the development of
necessary premisses is as follows. Where demonstration is possible, one who can
give no account which includes the cause has no scientific knowledge. If, then,
we suppose a syllogism in which, though A necessarily inheres in C, yet B, the
middle term of the demonstration, is not necessarily connected with A and C,
then the man who argues thus has no reasoned knowledge of the conclusion, since
this conclusion does not owe its necessity to the middle term; for though the
conclusion is necessary, the mediating link is a contingent fact.
74b32 Or again, if a man is without knowledge
now, though he still retains the steps of the argument, though there is no
change in himself or in the fact and no lapse of memory on his part; then
neither had he knowledge previously. But the mediating link, not being
necessary, may have perished in the interval; and if so, though there be no
change in him nor in the fact, and though he will still retain the steps of the
argument, yet he has not knowledge, and therefore had not knowledge before. Even
if the link has not actually perished but is liable to perish, this situation is
possible and might occur. But such a condition cannot be
knowledge.
75a1 When the conclusion is
necessary, the middle through which it was proved may yet quite easily be
non-necessary. You can in fact infer the necessary even from a non-necessary
premiss, just as you can infer the true from the not true. On the other hand,
when the middle is necessary the conclusion must be necessary; just as true
premisses always give a true conclusion. Thus, if A is necessarily predicated of
B and B of C, then A is necessarily predicated of C. But when the conclusion is
nonnecessary the middle cannot be necessary either. Thus: let A be predicated
non-necessarily of C but necessarily of B, and let B be a necessary predicate of
C; then A too will be a necessary predicate of C, which by hypothesis it is
not.
75a13 To sum up, then: demonstrative
knowledge must be knowledge of a necessary nexus, and therefore must clearly be
obtained through a necessary middle term; otherwise its possessor will know
neither the cause nor the fact that his conclusion is a necessary connexion.
Either he will mistake the non-necessary for the necessary and believe the
necessity of the conclusion without knowing it, or else he will not even believe
it-in which case he will be equally ignorant, whether he actually infers the
mere fact through middle terms or the reasoned fact and from immediate
premisses.
75a18 Of accidents that are not
essential according to our definition of essential there is no demonstrative
knowledge; for since an accident, in the sense in which I here speak of it, may
also not inhere, it is impossible to prove its inherence as a necessary
conclusion.
75a2l A difficulty, however,
might be raised as to why in dialectic, if the conclusion is not a necessary
connexion, such and such determinate premisses should be proposed in order to
deal with such and such determinate problems. Would not the result be the same
if one asked any questions whatever and then merely stated one’s conclusion?
75a24 The solution is that determinate
questions have to be put, not because the replies to them affirm facts which
necessitate facts affirmed by the conclusion, but because these answers are
propositions which if the answerer affirm, he must affirm the conclusion and
affirm it with truth if they are true.
75a28 Since it is just those attributes within every genus which are
essential and possessed by their respective subjects as such that are necessary
it is clear that both the conclusions and the premisses of demonstrations which
produce scientific knowledge are essential. For accidents are not necessary:
and, further, since accidents are not necessary one does not necessarily have
reasoned knowledge of a conclusion drawn from them (this is so even if the
accidental premisses are invariable but not essential, as in proofs through
signs; for though the conclusion be actually essential, one will not know it as
essential nor know its reason); but to have reasoned knowledge of a conclusion
is to know it through its cause. We may conclude that the middle must be
consequentially connected with the minor, and the major with the
middle.
7 75a38 It follows that we cannot in
demonstrating pass from one genus to another. We cannot, for instance, prove
geometrical truths by arithmetic.
75a39 For
there are three elements in demonstration: (1) what is proved, the conclusion-an
attribute inhering essentially in a genus; (2) the axioms, i.e. axioms which are
premisses of demonstration; (3) the subject-genus whose attributes, i.e.
essential properties, are revealed by the demonstration.
75b2 The axioms which are premisses of demonstration may be identical
in two or more sciences: but in the case of two different genera such as
arithmetic and geometry you cannot apply arithmetical demonstration to the
properties of magnitudes unless the magnitudes in question are numbers. How in
certain cases transference is possible I will explain later. Arithmetical
demonstration and the other sciences likewise possess, each of them, their own
genera;
75b8 so that if the demonstration is
to pass from one sphere to another, the genus must be either absolutely or to
some extent the same.
75b10 If this is not
so, transference is clearly impossible, because the extreme and the middle terms
must be drawn from the same genus: otherwise, as predicated, they will not be
essential and will thus be accidents.
75b13 That is why it cannot be proved by geometry that opposites fall
under one science, nor even that the product of two cubes is a cube. Nor can the
theorem of any one science be demonstrated by means of another science, unless
these theorems are related as subordinate to superior (e.g. as optical theorems
to geometry or harmonic theorems to arithmetic).
75b17 Geometry again cannot prove of lines any property which they do
not possess qua lines, i.e. in virtue of the fundamental truths of their
peculiar genus: it cannot show, for example, that the straight line is the most
beautiful of lines or the contrary of the circle; for these qualities do not
belong to lines in virtue of their peculiar genus, but through some property
which it shares with other genera.
8 75b2l It
is also clear that if the premisses from which the syllogism proceeds are
commensurately universal, the conclusion of such i.e. in the unqualified
sense-must also be eternal. Therefore no attribute can be demonstrated nor known
by strictly scientific knowledge to inhere in perishable things.
75b24 The proof can only be accidental,
because the attribute’s connexion with its perishable subject is not
commensurately universal but temporary and special. If such a demonstration is
made, one premiss must be perishable and not commensurately universal
(perishable because only if it is perishable will the conclusion be perishable;
not commensurately universal, because the predicate will be predicable of some
instances of the subject and not of others); so that the conclusion can only be
that a fact is true at the moment-not commensurately and universally.
75b32
The same is true of definitions, since a definition is either a primary premiss or a conclusion of a demonstration, or else only differs from a demonstration in the order of its terms.
Demonstration and science of merely
frequent occurrences-e.g. of eclipse as happening to the moon-are, as such,
clearly eternal: whereas so far as they are not eternal they are not fully
commensurate. Other subjects too have properties attaching to them in the same
way as eclipse attaches to the moon.
9 75b37 It is clear that if the conclusion is to show an attribute
inhering as such, nothing can be demonstrated except from its ‘appropriate’
basic truths. Consequently a proof even from true, indemonstrable, and immediate
premisses does not constitute knowledge.
75b40 Such proofs are like Bryson’s
method of squaring the circle; for they operate by taking as their middle a
common character-a character, therefore, which the subject may share with
another-and consequently they apply equally to subjects different in kind. They
therefore afford knowledge of an attribute only as inhering accidentally, not as
belonging to its subject as such: otherwise they would not have been applicable
to another genus. Our knowledge of any attribute’s connexion with a subject is
accidental unless we know that connexion through the middle term in virtue of
which it inheres, and as an inference from basic premisses essential and
‘appropriate’ to the subject-unless we know, e.g. the property of possessing
angles equal to two right angles as belonging to that subject in which it
inheres essentially, and as inferred from basic premisses essential and
‘appropriate’ to that subject: so that if that middle term also belongs
essentially to the minor, the middle must belong to the same kind as the major
and minor terms.
76a8 The only exceptions to
this rule are such cases as theorems in harmonics which are demonstrable by
arithmetic. Such theorems are proved by the same middle terms as arithmetical
properties, but with a qualification-the fact falls under a separate science
(for the subject genus is separate), but the reasoned fact concerns the superior
science, to which the attributes essentially belong. Thus, even these apparent
exceptions show that no attribute is strictly demonstrable except from its
‘appropriate’ basic truths, which, however, in the case of these sciences have
the requisite identity of character.
76a17 It
is no less evident that the peculiar basic truths of each inhering attribute are
indemonstrable; for basic truths from which they might be deduced would be basic
truths of all that is, and the science to which they belonged would possess
universal sovereignty.
76a19 This is so
because he knows better whose knowledge is deduced from higher causes, for his
knowledge is from prior premisses when it derives from causes themselves
uncaused: hence, if he knows better than others or best of all, his knowledge
would be science in a higher or the highest degree.
76a23 But, as things are, demonstration is not transferable to
another genus, with such exceptions as we have mentioned of the application of
geometrical demonstrations to theorems in mechanics or optics, or of
arithmetical demonstrations to those of harmonics.
76a26 It is hard to be sure whether one knows or not; for it is hard
to be sure whether one’s knowledge is based on the basic truths appropriate to
each attribute-the differentia of true knowledge. We think we have scientific
knowledge if we have reasoned from true and primary premisses. But that is not
so: the conclusion must be homogeneous with the basic facts of the
science.
10 76a3l I call the basic truths of
every genus those clements in it the existence of which cannot be proved.
76a32 As regards both these primary truths
and the attributes dependent on them the meaning of the name is assumed. The
fact of their existence as regards the primary truths must be assumed; but it
has to be proved of the remainder, the attributes. Thus we assume the meaning
alike of unity, straight, and triangular; but while as regards unity and
magnitude we assume also the fact of their existence, in the case of the
remainder proof is required.
76a37 Of the
basic truths used in the demonstrative sciences some are peculiar to each
science, and some are common, but common only in the sense of analogous, being
of use only in so far as they fall within the genus constituting the province of
the science in question.
76a40 Peculiar truths
are, e.g. the definitions of line and straight; common truths are such as ‘take
equals from equals and equals remain’.
76a42 Only so much of these common truths is required as falls within
the genus in question: for a truth of this kind will have the same force even if
not used generally but applied by the geometer only to magnitudes, or by the
arithmetician only to numbers.
76b2 Also
peculiar to a science are the subjects the existence as well as the meaning of
which it assumes, and the essential attributes of which it investigates, e.g. in
arithmetic units, in geometry points and lines. Both the existence and the
meaning of the subjects are assumed by these sciences; but of their essential
attributes only the meaning is assumed. For example arithmetic assumes the
meaning of odd and even, square and cube, geometry that of incommensurable, or
of deflection or verging of lines, whereas the existence of these attributes is
demonstrated by means of the axioms and from previous conclusions as premisses.
Astronomy too proceeds in the same way. For indeed every demonstrative science
has three elements: (1) that which it posits, the subject genus whose essential
attributes it examines; (2) the so-called axioms, which are primary premisses of
its demonstration; (3) the attributes, the meaning of which it assumes.
76b16 Yet some sciences may very well pass
over some of these elements; e.g. we might not expressly posit the existence of
the genus if its existence were obvious (for instance, the existence of hot and
cold is more evident than that of number); or we might omit to assume expressly
the meaning of the attributes if it were well understood. In the way the meaning
of axioms, such as ‘Take equals from equals and equals remain’, is well known
and so not expressly assumed. Nevertheless in the nature of the case the
essential elements of demonstration are three: the subject, the attributes, and
the basic premisses.
76b23 That which
expresses necessary self-grounded fact, and which we must necessarily believe,
is distinct both from the hypotheses of a science and from illegitimate
postulate-I say ‘must believe’, because all syllogism, and therefore a fortiori
demonstration, is addressed not to the spoken word, but to the discourse within
the soul, and though we can always raise objections to the spoken word, to the
inward discourse we cannot always object.
76b27 That which is capable of proof but assumed by the teacher
without proof is, if the pupil believes and accepts it, hypothesis, though only
in a limited sense hypothesis-that is, relatively to the pupil; if the pupil has
no opinion or a contrary opinion on the matter, the same assumption is an
illegitimate postulate. Therein lies the distinction between hypothesis and
illegitimate postulate: the latter is the contrary of the pupil’s opinion,
demonstrable, but assumed and used without demonstration.
76b35 The definition-viz. those which are not expressed as statements
that anything is or is not-are not hypotheses: but it is in the premisses of a
science that its hypotheses are contained. Definitions require only to be
understood, and this is not hypothesis-unless it be contended that the pupil’s
hearing is also an hypothesis required by the teacher. Hypotheses, on the
contrary, postulate facts on the being of which depends the being of the fact
inferred.
76b39 Nor are the geometer’s
hypotheses false, as some have held, urging that one must not employ falsehood
and that the geometer is uttering falsehood in stating that the line which he
draws is a foot long or straight, when it is actually neither. The truth is that
the geometer does not draw any conclusion from the being of the particular line
of which he speaks, but from what his diagrams symbolize.
77a3 A further distinction is that all hypotheses and illegitimate
postulates are either universal or particular, whereas a definition is
neither.
11 77a5 So demonstration does not
necessarily imply the being of Forms nor a One beside a Many, but it does
necessarily imply the possibility of truly predicating one of many; since
without this possibility we cannot save the universal, and if the universal
goes, the middle term goes witb. it, and so demonstration becomes impossible. We
conclude, then, that there must be a single identical term unequivocally
predicable of a number of individuals.
77a10 The law that it is impossible to affirm and deny simultaneously
the same predicate of the same subject is not expressly posited by any
demonstration except when the conclusion also has to be expressed in that form;
in which case the proof lays down as its major premiss that the major is truly
affirmed of the middle but falsely denied. It makes no difference, however, if
we add to the middle, or again to the minor term, the corresponding negative.
For grant a minor term of which it is true to predicate man-even if it be also
true to predicate not-man of it — still grant simply that man is animal and not
not-animal, and the conclusion follows: for it will still be true to say that
Callias — even if it be also true to say that not-Callias — is animal and not
not-animal. The reason is that the major term is predicable not only of the
middle, but of something other than the middle as well, being of wider
application; so that the conclusion is not affected even if the middle is
extended to cover the original middle term and also what is not the original
middle term.
77a22 The law that every
predicate can be either truly affirmed or truly denied of every subject is
posited by such demonstration as uses reductio ad impossibile, and then not
always universally, but so far as it is requisite; within the limits, that is,
of the genus-the genus, I mean (as I have already explained), to which the man
of science applies his demonstrations.
77a26 In virtue of the common elements of demonstration-I mean the
common axioms which are used as premisses of demonstration, not the subjects nor
the attributes demonstrated as belonging to them-all the sciences have communion
with one another,
77a29 and in communion with
them all is dialectic and any science which might attempt a universal proof of
axioms such as the law of excluded middle, the law that the subtraction of
equals from equals leaves equal remainders, or other axioms of the same kind.
Dialectic has no definite sphere of this kind, not being confined to a single
genus. Otherwise its method would not be interrogative; for the interrogative
method is barred to the demonstrator, who cannot use the opposite facts to prove
the same nexus. This was shown in my work on the syllogism.
12
77a36 If a syllogistic question is equivalent to a
proposition embodying one of the two sides of a contradiction, and if each
science has its peculiar propositions from which its peculiar conclusion is
developed, then there is such a thing as a distinctively scientific question,
and it is the interrogative form of the premisses from which the ‘appropriate’
conclusion of each science is developed. Hence it is clear that not every
question will be relevant to geometry, nor to medicine, nor to any other
science:
77a42 only those questions will be
geometrical which form premisses for the proof of the theorems of geometry or of
any other science, such as optics, which uses the same basic truths as geometry.
Of the other sciences the like is true.
77b2 Of these questions the geometer is bound to give his account,
using the basic truths of geometry in conjunction with his previous conclusions;
of the basic truths the geometer, as such, is not bound to give any account. The
like is true of the other sciences.
77b6 There
is a limit, then, to the questions which we may put to each man of science; nor
is each man of science bound to answer all inquiries on each several subject,
but only such as fall within the defined field of his own science.
77b8 If, then, in controversy with a geometer
qua geometer the disputant confines himself to geometry and proves anything from
geometrical premisses, he is clearly to be applauded; if he goes outside these
he will be at fault, and obviously cannot even refute the geometer except
accidentally. One should therefore not discuss geometry among those who are not
geometers, for in such a company an unsound argument will pass unnoticed. This
is correspondingly true in the other sciences.
77b16 Since there are ‘geometrical’ questions, does it follow that
there are also distinctively ‘ungeometrical’ questions?
77b17 Further, in each special science-geometry for instance-what
kind of error is it that may vitiate questions, and yet not exclude them from
that science?
77b19 Again, is the erroneous
conclusion one constructed from premisses opposite to the true premisses, or is
it formal fallacy though drawn from geometrical premisses?
77b2l
Or, perhaps, the erroneous conclusion is due to the drawing
of premisses from another science; e.g. in a geometrical controversy a musical
question is distinctively ungeometrical,
77b23 whereas the notion that parallels meet is in one sense
geometrical, being ungeometrical in a different fashion: the reason being that
‘ungeometrical’, like ‘unrhythmical’, is equivocal, meaning in the one case not
geometry at all, in the other bad geometry? It is this error, i.e. error based
on premisses of this kind-’of’ the science but false-that is the contrary of
science.
77b27 In mathematics the formal
fallacy is not so common, because it is the middle term in which the ambiguity
lies, since the major is predicated of the whole of the middle and the middle of
the whole of the minor (the predicate of course never has the prefix ‘all’); and
in mathematics one can, so to speak, see these middle terms with an intellectual
vision, while in dialectic the ambiguity may escape detection. E.g. ‘Is every
circle a figure?’ A diagram shows that this is so, but the minor premiss ‘Are
epics circles?’ is shown by the diagram to be false.
77b34 If a proof has an inductive minor premiss, one should not bring
an ‘objection’ against it. For since every premiss must be applicable to a
number of cases (otherwise it will not be true in every instance, which, since
the syllogism proceeds from universals, it must be), then assuredly the same is
true of an ‘objection’; since premisses and ‘objections’ are so far the same
that anything which can be validly advanced as an ‘objection’ must be such that
it could take the form of a premiss, either demonstrative or dialectical.
77b40 On the other hand, arguments formally
illogical do sometimes occur through taking as middles mere attributes of the
major and minor terms. An instance of this is Caeneus’ proof that fire increases
in geometrical proportion: ‘Fire’, he argues, ‘increases rapidly, and so does
geometrical proportion’. There is no syllogism so, but there is a syllogism if
the most rapidly increasing proportion is geometrical and the most rapidly
increasing proportion is attributable to fire in its motion.
78a5
Sometimes, no doubt, it is impossible to reason from
premisses predicating mere attributes: but sometimes it is possible, though the
possibility is overlooked.
78a8 If false
premisses could never give true conclusions ‘resolution’ would be easy, for
premisses and conclusion would in that case inevitably reciprocate. I might then
argue thus: let A be an existing fact; let the existence of A imply such and
such facts actually known to me to exist, which we may call B. I can now, since
they reciprocate, infer A from B.
78a10 Reciprocation of premisses and conclusion is more frequent in
mathematics, because mathematics takes definitions, but never an accident, for
its premisses-a second characteristic distinguishing mathematical reasoning from
dialectical disputations.
78a13 A science
expands not by the interposition of fresh middle terms, but by the apposition of
fresh extreme terms. E.g. A is predicated of B, B of C, C of D, and so
indefinitely. Or the expansion may be lateral: e.g. one major A, may be proved
of two minors, C and E. Thus let A represent number-a number or number taken
indeterminately; B determinate odd number; C any particular odd number. We can
then predicate A of C. Next let D represent determinate even number, and E even
number. Then A is predicable of E.
13 78a22 Knowledge of the fact differs from knowledge of the reasoned
fact. To begin with, they differ within the same science and in two ways: (1)
when the premisses of the syllogism are not immediate (for then the proximate
cause is not contained in them-a necessary condition of knowledge of the
reasoned fact): (2) when the premisses are immediate, but instead of the cause
the better known of the two reciprocals is taken as the middle; for of two
reciprocally predicable terms the one which is not the cause may quite easily be
the better known and so become the middle term of the demonstration.
78a30 Thus (2) (a) you might prove as follows
that the planets are near because they do not twinkle: let C be the planets, B
not twinkling, A proximity. Then B is predicable of C; for the planets do not
twinkle. But A is also predicable of B, since that which does not twinkle is
near — we must take this truth as having been reached by induction or
sense-perception. Therefore A is a necessary predicate of C; so that we have
demonstrated that the planets are near. This syllogism, then, proves not the
reasoned fact but only the fact; since they are not near because they do not
twinkle, but, because they are near, do not twinkle.
78a39 The major and middle of the proof, however, may be reversed,
and then the demonstration will be of the reasoned fact. Thus: let C be the
planets, B proximity, A not twinkling. Then B is an attribute of C, and A-not
twinkling-of B. Consequently A is predicable of C, and the syllogism proves the
reasoned fact, since its middle term is the proximate cause.
78b3
Another example is the inference that the moon is spherical
from its manner of waxing. Thus: since that which so waxes is spherical, and
since the moon so waxes, clearly the moon is spherical. Put in this form, the
syllogism turns out to be proof of the fact, but if the middle and major be
reversed it is proof of the reasoned fact; since the moon is not spherical
because it waxes in a certain manner, but waxes in such a manner because it is
spherical. (Let C be the moon, B spherical, and A waxing.)
78b10
Again (b), in cases where the cause and the effect are not
reciprocal and the effect is the better known, the fact is demonstrated but not
the reasoned fact.
78b13 This also occurs (1)
when the middle falls outside the major and minor, for here too the strict cause
is not given, and so the demonstration is of the fact, not of the reasoned fact.
78b14 For example, the question ‘Why does not
a wall breathe?’ might be answered, ‘Because it is not an animal’; but that
answer would not give the strict cause, because if not being an animal causes
the absence of respiration, then being an animal should be the cause of
respiration, according to the rule that if the negation of causes the
non-inherence of y, the affirmation of x causes the inherence of y; e.g. if the
disproportion of the hot and cold elements is the cause of ill health, their
proportion is the cause of health; and conversely, if the assertion of x causes
the inherence of y, the negation of x must cause y’s non-inherence. But in the
case given this consequence does not result; for not every animal breathes.
78b24 A syllogism with this kind of cause
takes place in the second figure. Thus: let A be animal, B respiration, C wall.
Then A is predicable of all B (for all that breathes is animal), but of no C;
and consequently B is predicable of no C; that is, the wall does not breathe.
78b27 Such causes are like far-fetched
explanations, which precisely consist in making the cause too remote, as in
Anacharsis’ account of why the Scythians have no flute-players; namely because
they have no vines.
78b32 Thus, then, do the
syllogism of the fact and the syllogism of the reasoned fact differ within one
science and according to the position of the middle terms.
78b34
But there is another way too in which the fact and the
reasoned fact differ, and that is when they are investigated respectively by
different sciences.
78b35 This occurs in the
case of problems related to one another as subordinate and superior, as when
optical problems are subordinated to geometry, mechanical problems to
stereometry, harmonic problems to arithmetic, the data of observation to
astronomy.
79a1 (Some of these sciences bear
almost the same name; e.g. mathematical and nautical astronomy, mathematical and
acoustical harmonics.)
79a3 Here it is the
business of the empirical observers to know the fact, of the mathematicians to
know the reasoned fact; for the latter are in possession of the demonstrations
giving the causes, and are often ignorant of the fact: just as we have often a
clear insight into a universal, but through lack of observation are ignorant of
some of its particular instances. These connexions have a perceptible existence
though they are manifestations of forms. For the mathematical sciences concern
forms: they do not demonstrate properties of a substratum, since, even though
the geometrical subjects are predicable as properties of a perceptible
substratum, it is not as thus predicable that the mathematician demonstrates
properties of them.
79a10 As optics is
related to geometry, so another science is related to optics, namely the theory
of the rainbow. Here knowledge of the fact is within the province of the natural
philosopher, knowledge of the reasoned fact within that of the optician, either
qua optician or qua mathematical optician.
79a13 Many sciences not standing in this mutual relation enter into
it at points; e.g. medicine and geometry: it is the physician’s business to know
that circular wounds heal more slowly, the geometer’s to know the reason
why.
14 79a17 Of all the figures the most
scientific is the first. Thus, it is the vehicle of the demonstrations of all
the mathematical sciences, such as arithmetic, geometry, and optics, and
practically all of all sciences that investigate causes: for the syllogism of
the reasoned fact is either exclusively or generally speaking and in most cases
in this figure-a second proof that this figure is the most scientific; for grasp
of a reasoned conclusion is the primary condition of knowledge.
79a23 Thirdly, the first is the only figure
which enables us to pursue knowledge of the essence of a thing. In the second
figure no affirmative conclusion is possible, and knowledge of a thing’s essence
must be affirmative; while in the third figure the conclusion can be
affirmative, but cannot be universal, and essence must have a universal
character: e.g. man is not two-footed animal in any qualified sense, but
universally.
79a30 Finally, the first figure
has no need of the others, while it is by means of the first that the other two
figures are developed, and have their intervals closepacked until immediate
premisses are reached. Clearly, therefore, the first figure is the primary
condition of knowledge.
15 79a33 Just as an
attribute A may (as we saw) be atomically connected with a subject B, so its
disconnexion may be atomic. I call ‘atomic’ connexions or disconnexions which
involve no intermediate term; since in that case the connexion or disconnexion
will not be mediated by something other than the terms themselves.
79a36 It follows that if either A or B, or
both A and B, have a genus, their disconnexion cannot be primary. Thus: let C be
the genus of A. Then, if C is not the genus of B-for A may well have a genus
which is not the genus of B-there will be a syllogism proving A’s disconnexion
from B thus: all A is C, no B is C, therefore no B is A. Or if it is B
which has a genus D, we have all B is D, no D is A, therefore no B is A, by
syllogism; and the proof will be similar if both A and B have a genus.
79b5 That the genus of A need not be the genus
of B and vice versa, is shown by the existence of mutually exclusive coordinate
series of predication. If no term in the series ACD...is predicable of any term
in the series BEF...,and if G-a term in the former series-is the genus of A,
clearly G will not be the genus of B; since, if it were, the series would not be
mutually exclusive. So also if B has a genus, it will not be the genus of A.
79b12 If, on the other hand, neither A nor B
has a genus and A does not inhere in B, this disconnexion must be atomic. If
there be a middle term, one or other of them is bound to have a genus, for the
syllogism will be either in the first or the second figure. If it is in the
first, B will have a genus-for the premiss containing it must be affirmative: if
in the second, either A or B indifferently, since syllogism is possible if
either is contained in a negative premiss, but not if both premisses are
negative.
79b21 Hence it is clear that one
thing may be atomically disconnected from another, and we have stated when and
how this is possible.
16 79b23 Ignorance-defined not as the negation of knowledge but as a
positive state of mind-is error produced by inference. (1) Let us first consider
propositions asserting a predicate’s immediate connexion with or disconnexion
from a subject. Here, it is true, positive error may befall one in alternative
ways; for it may arise where one directly believes a connexion or disconnexion
as well as where one’s belief is acquired by inference.
79b28 The error, however, that consists in a direct belief is without
complication; but the error resulting from inference-which here concerns
us-takes many forms. Thus, let A be atomically disconnected from all B: then the
conclusion inferred through a middle term C, that all B is A, will be a case of
error produced by syllogism.
79b31 Now, two
cases are possible. Either (a) both premisses, or (b) one premiss only, may be
false. (a) If neither A is an attribute of any C nor C of any B, whereas the
contrary was posited in both cases, both premisses will be false.
79b34 (C may quite well be so related to A
and B that C is neither subordinate to A nor a universal attribute of B: for B,
since A was said to be primarily disconnected from B, cannot have a genus, and A
need not necessarily be a universal attribute of all things. Consequently both
premisses may be false.)
79b40 On the other
hand, (b) one of the premisses may be true, though not either indifferently but
only the major A-C since, B having no genus, the premiss C-B will always be
false, while A-C may be true. This is the case if, for example, A is related
atomically to both C and B; because when the same term is related atomically to
more terms than one, neither of those terms will belong to the other. It is, of
course, equally the case if A-C is not atomic.
80a6 Error of attribution, then, occurs through these causes and in
this form only-for we found that no syllogism of universal attribution was
possible in any figure but the first.
80a8 On
the other hand, an error of non-attribution may occur either in the first or in
the second figure. Let us therefore first explain the various forms it takes in
the first figure and the character of the premisses in each
case.
80a11 (c) It may occur when both
premisses are false; e.g. supposing A atomically connected with both C and B, if
it be then assumed that no C is and all B is C, both premisses are
false.
80a14 (d) It is also possible when one
is false. This may be either premiss indifferently. A-C may be true, C-B
false-A-C true because A is not an attribute of all things, C-B false because C,
which never has the attribute A, cannot be an attribute of B; for if C-B were
true, the premiss A-C would no longer be true, and besides if both premisses
were true, the conclusion would be true.
80a20 Or again, C-B may be true and A-C false; e.g. if both C and A
contain B as genera, one of them must be subordinate to the other, so that if
the premiss takes the form No C is A, it will be false. This makes it clear that
whether either or both premisses are false, the conclusion will equally be
false.
80a27 In the second figure the
premisses cannot both be wholly false; for if all B is A, no middle term can be
with truth universally affirmed of one extreme and universally denied of the
other: but premisses in which the middle is affirmed of one extreme and denied
of the other are the necessary condition if one is to get a valid inference at
all. Therefore if, taken in this way, they are wholly false, their contraries
conversely should be wholly true. But this is impossible. On the other hand,
there is nothing to prevent both premisses being partially false; e.g. if
actually some A is C and some B is C, then if it is premised that all A is C and
no B is C, both premisses are false, yet partially, not wholly, false. The same
is true if the major is made negative instead of the minor.
80a38
Or one premiss may be wholly false, and it may be either of
them. Thus, supposing that actually an attribute of all A must also be an
attribute of all B, then if C is yet taken to be a universal attribute of all
but universally non-attributable to B, C-A will be true but C-B false. Again,
actually that which is an attribute of no B will not be an attribute of all A
either; for if it be an attribute of all A, it will also be an attribute of all
B, which is contrary to supposition; but if C be nevertheless assumed to be a
universal attribute of A, but an attribute of no B, then the premiss C-B is true
but the major is false.
80b6 The case is
similar if the major is made the negative premiss. For in fact what is an
attribute of no A will not be an attribute of any B either; and if it be yet
assumed that C is universally non-attributable to A, but a universal attribute
of B, the premiss C-A is true but the minor wholly false. Again, in fact it is
false to assume that that which is an attribute of all B is an attribute of no
A, for if it be an attribute of all B, it must be an attribute of some A. If
then C is nevertheless assumed to be an attribute of all B but of no A, C-B will
be true but C-A false.
80b14 It is thus clear
that in the case of atomic propositions erroneous inference will be possible not
only when both premisses are false but also when only one is false.
17
80b17 In the case of attributes not atomically
connected with or disconnected from their subjects, (a) (i) as long as the false
conclusion is inferred through the ‘appropriate’ middle, only the major and not
both premisses can be false. By ‘appropriate middle’ I mean the middle term
through which the contradictory-i.e. the true-conclusion is inferrible. Thus,
let A be attributable to B through a middle term C: then, since to produce a
conclusion the premiss C-B must be taken affirmatively, it is clear that this
premiss must always be true, for its quality is not changed. But the major A-C
is false, for it is by a change in the quality of A-C that the conclusion
becomes its contradictory-i.e. true.
80b27 Similarly (ii) if the middle is taken from another series of
predication; e.g. suppose D to be not only contained within A as a part within
its whole but also predicable of all B. Then the premiss D-B must remain
unchanged, but the quality of A-D must be changed; so that D-B is always true,
A-D always false. Such error is practically identical with that which is
inferred through the ‘appropriate’ middle.
80b32 On the other hand, (b) if the conclusion is not inferred
through the ‘appropriate’ middle-(i) when the middle is subordinate to A but is
predicable of no B, both premisses must be false, because if there is to be a
conclusion both must be posited as asserting the contrary of what is actually
the fact, and so posited both become false: e.g. suppose that actually all D is
A but no B is D; then if these premisses are changed in quality, a conclusion
will follow and both of the new premisses will be false. When, however, (ii) the
middle D is not subordinate to A, A-D will be true, D-B false-A-D true because A
was not subordinate to D, D-B false because if it had been true, the conclusion
too would have been true; but it is ex hypothesi false.
81a5 When the erroneous inference is in the second figure, both
premisses cannot be entirely false; since if B is subordinate to A, there can be
no middle predicable of all of one extreme and of none of the other, as was
stated before. One premiss, however, may be false, and it may be either of them.
Thus, if C is actually an attribute of both A and B, but is assumed to be an
attribute of A only and not of B, C-A will be true, C-B false: or again if C be
assumed to be attributable to B but to no A, C-B will be true, C-A false. We
have stated when and through what kinds of premisses error will result in cases
where the erroneous conclusion is negative. If the conclusion is affirmative,
(a) (i) it may be inferred through the ‘appropriate’ middle term. In this case
both premisses cannot be false since, as we said before, C-B must remain
unchanged if there is to be a conclusion, and consequently A-C, the quality of
which is changed, will always be false.
81a20 This is equally true if (ii) the middle is taken from another
series of predication, as was stated to be the case also with regard to negative
error; for D-B must remain unchanged, while the quality of A-D must be
converted, and the type of error is the same as before.
81a25 (b) The middle may be inappropriate. Then (i) if D is
subordinate to A, A-D will be true, but D-B false; since A may quite well be
predicable of several terms no one of which can be subordinated to another. If,
however, (ii) D is not subordinate to A, obviously A-D, since it is affirmed,
will always be false, while D-B may be either true or false; for A may very well
be an attribute of no D, whereas all B is D, e.g. no science is animal, all
music is science. Equally well A may be an attribute of no D, and D of no B. It
emerges, then, that if the middle term is not subordinate to the major, not only
both premisses but either singly may be false.
81a35 Thus we have made it clear how many varieties of erroneous
inference are liable to happen and through what kinds of premisses they occur,
in the case both of immediate and of demonstrable truths.
18 81a38
It is also clear that the loss of any one of the senses
entails the loss of a corresponding portion of knowledge, and that,
81a39 since we learn either by induction or
by demonstration, this knowledge cannot be acquired. Thus demonstration develops
from universals, induction from particulars; but since it is possible to
familiarize the pupil with even the so-called mathematical abstractions only
through induction-i.e. only because each subject genus possesses, in virtue of a
determinate mathematical character, certain properties which can be treated as
separate even though they do not exist in isolation-it is consequently
impossible to come to grasp universals except through induction. But induction
is impossible for those who have not sense-perception. For it is
sense-perception alone which is adequate for grasping the particulars: they
cannot be objects of scientific knowledge, because neither can universals give
us knowledge of them without induction, nor can we get it through induction
without sense-perception.
19 81b10 Every
syllogism is effected by means of three terms. One kind of syllogism serves to
prove that A inheres in C by showing that A inheres in B and B in C; the other
is negative and one of its premisses asserts one term of another, while the
other denies one term of another.
81b14 It is
clear, then, that these are the fundamentals and so-called hypotheses of
syllogism. Assume them as they have been stated, and proof is bound to
follow-proof that A inheres in C through B, and again that A inheres in B
through some other middle term, and similarly that B inheres in C.
81b18 If our reasoning aims at gaining
credence and so is merely dialectical, it is obvious that we have only to see
that our inference is based on premisses as credible as possible: so that if a
middle term between A and B is credible though not real, one can reason through
it and complete a dialectical syllogism. If, however, one is aiming at truth,
one must be guided by the real connexions of subjects and attributes.
81b24 Thus: since there are attributes which
are predicated of a subject essentially or naturally and not coincidentally-not,
that is, in the sense in which we say ‘That white (thing) is a man’, which is
not the same mode of predication as when we say ‘The man is white’: the man is
white not because he is something else but because he is man, but the white is
man because ‘being white’ coincides with ‘humanity’ within one
substratum-therefore there are terms such as are naturally subjects of
predicates.
81b30 Suppose, then, C such a
term not itself attributable to anything else as to a subject, but the proximate
subject of the attribute B— i.e. so that B-C is immediate; suppose further E
related immediately to F, and F to B. The first question is, must this series
terminate, or can it proceed to infinity?
81b34 The second question is as follows: Suppose nothing is
essentially predicated of A, but A is predicated primarily of H and of no
intermediate prior term, and suppose H similarly related to G and G to B; then
must this series also terminate, or can it too proceed to infinity? There is
this much difference between the questions: the first is, is it possible to
start from that which is not itself attributable to anything else but is the
subject of attributes, and ascend to infinity? The second is the problem whether
one can start from that which is a predicate but not itself a subject of
predicates, and descend to infinity?
82a2 A
third question is, if the extreme terms are fixed, can there be an infinity of
middles? I mean this: suppose for example that A inheres in C and B is
intermediate between them, but between B and A there are other middles, and
between these again fresh middles; can these proceed to infinity or can they
not?
82a7 This is the equivalent of inquiring,
do demonstrations proceed to infinity, i.e. is everything demonstrable? Or do
ultimate subject and primary attribute limit one another?
82a9 I hold that the same questions arise with regard to negative
conclusions and premisses: viz. if A is attributable to no B, then either this
predication will be primary, or there will be an intermediate term prior to B to
which a is not attributable-G, let us say, which is attributable to all B-and
there may still be another term H prior to G, which is attributable to all G.
The same questions arise, I say, because in these cases too either the series of
prior terms to which a is not attributable is infinite or it
terminates.
82a15 One cannot ask the same
questions in the case of reciprocating terms, since when subject and predicate
are convertible there is neither primary nor ultimate subject, seeing that all
the reciprocals qua subjects stand in the same relation to one another, whether
we say that the subject has an infinity of attributes or that both subjects and
attributes-and we raised the question in both cases-are infinite in number.
These questions then cannot be asked-unless, indeed, the terms can reciprocate
by two different modes, by accidental predication in one relation and natural
predication in the other.
20 82a21 Now, it is
clear that if the predications terminate in both the upward and the downward
direction (by ‘upward’ I mean the ascent to the more universal, by ‘downward’
the descent to the more particular), the middle terms cannot be infinite in
number.
82a24 For suppose that A is
predicated of F, and that the intermediates-call them BB’B”...-are infinite,
then clearly you might descend from and find one term predicated of another ad
infinitum, since you have an infinity of terms between you and F; and equally,
if you ascend from F, there are infinite terms between you and A. It follows
that if these processes are impossible there cannot be an infinity of
intermediates between A and F.
82a30 Nor is
it of any effect to urge that some terms of the series AB...F are contiguous so
as to exclude intermediates, while others cannot be taken into the argument at
all: whichever terms of the series B...I take, the number of intermediates in
the direction either of A or of F must be finite or infinite: where the infinite
series starts, whether from the first term or from a later one, is of no moment,
for the succeeding terms in any case are infinite in number.
21
82a37 Further, if in affirmative demonstration the
series terminates in both directions, clearly it will terminate too in negative
demonstration. Let us assume that we cannot proceed to infinity either by
ascending from the ultimate term (by ‘ultimate term’ I mean a term such as was,
not itself attributable to a subject but itself the subject of attributes), or
by descending towards an ultimate from the primary term (by ‘primary term’ I
mean a term predicable of a subject but not itself a subject). If this
assumption is justified, the series will also terminate in the case of negation.
82b4 For a negative conclusion can be proved
in all three figures. In the first figure it is proved thus: no B is A, all C is
B. In packing the interval B-C we must reach immediate propositions — as is
always the case with the minor premiss — since B-C is affirmative. As regards
the other premiss it is plain that if the major term is denied of a term D prior
to B, D will have to be predicable of all B, and if the major is denied of yet
another term prior to D, this term must be predicable of all D. Consequently,
since the ascending series is finite, the descent will also terminate and there
will be a subject of which A is primarily non-predicable.
82b13
In the second figure the syllogism is, all A is B, no C is
B,..no C is A. If proof of this is required, plainly it may be shown either in
the first figure as above, in the second as here, or in the third. The first
figure has been discussed, and we will proceed to display the second, proof by
which will be as follows: all B is D, no C is D..., since it is required that B
should be a subject of which a predicate is affirmed. Next, since D is to be
proved not to belong to C, then D has a further predicate which is denied of C.
Therefore, since the succession of predicates affirmed of an ever higher
universal terminates, the succession of predicates denied terminates
too.
82b23 The third figure shows it as
follows: all B is A, some B is not C. Therefore some A is not C. This premiss,
i.e. C-B, will be proved either in the same figure or in one of the two figures
discussed above. In the first and second figures the series terminates. If we
use the third figure, we shall take as premisses, all E is B, some E is not C,
and this premiss again will be proved by a similar prosyllogism. But since it is
assumed that the series of descending subjects also terminates, plainly the
series of more universal non-predicables will terminate also.
82b28 Even supposing that the proof is not
confined to one method, but employs them all and is now in the first figure, now
in the second or third-even so the regress will terminate, for the methods are
finite in number, and if finite things are combined in a finite number of ways,
the result must be finite. Thus it is plain that the regress of middles
terminates in the case of negative demonstration, if it does so also in the case
of affirmative demonstration.
82b34 That in
fact the regress terminates in both these cases may be made clear by the
following dialectical considerations.
22 83a1 In the case of predicates constituting the essential nature of a
thing, it clearly terminates, seeing that if definition is possible, or in other
words, if essential form is knowable, and an infinite series cannot be
traversed, predicates constituting a thing’s essential nature must be finite in
number. But as regards predicates generally we have the following prefatory
remarks to make. (1) We can affirm without falsehood ‘the white (thing) is
walking’, and that big (thing) is a log’; or again, ‘the log is big’, and ‘the
man walks’. But the affirmation differs in the two cases. When I affirm ‘the
white is a log’, I mean that something which happens to be white is a log-not
that white is the substratum in which log inheres, for it was not qua white or
qua a species of white that the white (thing) came to be a log, and the white
(thing) is consequently not a log except incidentally. On the other hand, when I
affirm ‘the log is white’, I do not mean that something else, which happens
also to be a log, is white (as I should if I said 'the musician is white,'
which would mean 'the man who happens also to be a musician is white');
on the contrary, log is here the substratum-the substratum which actually came to be white,
and did so qua wood or qua a species of wood and qua nothing else.
If we must lay down a rule, let us entitle the latter kind of statement predication,
and the former not predication at all, or not strict but accidental predication.
'White' and 'log' will thus serve as types respectively of predicate and subject.
We shall assume, then, that the predicate is invariably predicated strictly and not accidentally of the subject, for on such predication demonstrations depend for their force.
83a21 It follows from this that when a
single attribute is predicated of a single subject, the predicate must affirm of
the subject either some element constituting its essential nature, or that it is
in some way qualified, quantified, essentially related, active, passive, placed,
or dated.
83a24 (2) Predicates which signify
substance signify that the subject is identical with the predicate or with a
species of the predicate. Predicates not signifying substance which are
predicated of a subject not identical with themselves or with a species of
themselves are accidental or coincidental;
83a27 e.g. white is a coincident of man, seeing that man is not
identical with white or a species of white, but rather with animal, since man is
identical with a species of animal. These predicates which do not signify
substance must be predicates of some other subject, and nothing can be white
which is not also other than white.
83a33 The
Forms we can dispense with, for they are mere sound without sense; and even if
there are such things, they are not relevant to our discussion, since
demonstrations are concerned with predicates such as we have
defined.
83a36 (3) If A is a quality of B, B
cannot be a quality of A-a quality of a quality.
83a37 Therefore A and B cannot be predicated reciprocally of one
another in strict predication: they can be affirmed without falsehood of one
another, but not genuinely predicated of each other.
83a39 For one alternative is that they should be substantially
predicated of one another, i.e. B would become the genus or differentia of A-the
predicate now become subject.
83b1 But it has
been shown that in these substantial predications neither the ascending
predicates nor the descending subjects form an infinite series; e.g. neither the
series, man is biped, biped is animal, &c., nor the series predicating
animal of man, man of Callias, Callias of a further. subject as an element of
its essential nature, is infinite. For all such substance is definable, and an
infinite series cannot be traversed in thought: consequently neither the ascent
nor the descent is infinite, since a substance whose predicates were infinite
would not be definable.
83b8 Hence they will
not be predicated each as the genus of the other; for this would equate a genus
with one of its own species.
83b10 Nor (the
other alternative) can a quale be reciprocally predicated of a quale, nor any
term belonging to an adjectival category of another such term, except by
accidental predication; for all such predicates are coincidents and are
predicated of substances.
83b13 On the other
hand - in proof of the impossibility of an infinite ascending series-every
predication displays the subject as somehow qualified or quantified or as
characterized under one of the other adjectival categories, or else is an
element in its substantial nature: these latter are limited in number, and the
number of the widest kinds under which predications fall is also limited, for
every predication must exhibit its subject as somehow qualified, quantified,
essentially related, acting or suffering, or in some place or at some time. I
assume first that predication implies a single subject and a single attribute,
and secondly that predicates which are not substantial are not predicated of one
another. We assume this because such predicates are all coincidents, and though
some are essential coincidents, others of a different type, yet we maintain that
all of them alike are predicated of some substratum and that a coincident is
never a substratum-since we do not class as a coincident anything which does not owe
its designation to its being something other than itself,
but always hold that any coincident is predicated of some substratum other than itself,
and that another group of coincidents may have a different substratum.
83b24 Subject to these assumptions then, neither the ascending nor
the descending series of predication in which a single attribute is predicated
of a single subject is infinite. For the subjects of which coincidents are
predicated are as many as the constitutive elements of each individual
substance, and these we have seen are not infinite in number, while in the
ascending series are contained those constitutive elements with their
coincidents-both of which are finite. We conclude that there is a given subject
(D) of which some attribute (C) is primarily predicable; that there must be an
attribute (B) primarily predicable of the first attribute, and that the series
must end with a term (A) not predicable of any term prior to the last subject of
which it was predicated (B), and of which no term prior to it is
predicable.
83b33 The argument we have given
is one of the so-called proofs; an alternative proof follows. Predicates so
related to their subjects that there are other predicates prior to them
predicable of those subjects are demonstrable; but of demonstrable propositions
one cannot have something better than knowledge, nor can one know them without
demonstration. Secondly, if a consequent is only known through an antecedent
(viz. premisses prior to it) and we neither know this antecedent nor have
something better than knowledge of it, then we shall not have scientific
knowledge of the consequent. Therefore, if it is possible through demonstration
to know anything without qualification and not merely as dependent on the
acceptance of certain premisses-i.e. hypothetically-the series of intermediate
predications must terminate. If it does not terminate, and beyond any predicate
taken as higher than another there remains another still higher, then every
predicate is demonstrable. Consequently, since these demonstrable predicates are infinite in number and therefore cannot be traversed, we shall not know them by demonstration. If, therefore, we have not something better than knowledge of them, we cannot through demonstration have unqualified but only hypothetical science of anything.
As dialectical proofs of our contention these may carry conviction,
84a8 but an analytic process will show more briefly that neither the
ascent nor the descent of predication can be infinite in the demonstrative
sciences which are the object of our investigation.
84a10 Demonstration proves the inherence of essential attributes in
things.
84a11 Now attributes may be essential
for two reasons: either because they are elements in the essential nature of
their subjects, or because their subjects are elements in their essential
nature. An example of the latter is odd as an attribute of number-though it is
number’s attribute, yet number itself is an element in the definition of odd; of
the former, multiplicity or the indivisible, which are elements in the
definition of number.
84a18 In neither kind
of attribution can the terms be infinite. They are not infinite where each is
related to the term below it as odd is to number, for this would mean the
inherence in odd of another attribute of odd in whose nature odd was an
essential element: but then number will be an ultimate subject of the whole
infinite chain of attributes, and be an element in the definition of each of
them. Hence, since an infinity of attributes such as contain their subject in
their definition cannot inhere in a single thing, the ascending series is
equally finite.
84a23 Note, moreover, that
all such attributes must so inhere in the ultimate subject-e.g. its attributes
in number and number in them-as to be commensurate with the subject and not of
wider extent.
84a25 Attributes which are
essential elements in the nature of their subjects are equally finite: otherwise
definition would be impossible. Hence, if all the attributes predicated are
essential and these cannot be infinite, the ascending series will terminate, and
consequently the descending series too.
84a28 If this is so, it follows that the intermediates between any
two terms are also always limited in number.
84a29 An immediately obvious consequence of this is that
demonstrations necessarily involve basic truths, and that the contention of
some-referred to at the outset-that all truths are demonstrable is mistaken. For
if there are basic truths, (a) not all truths are demonstrable, and (b) an
infinite regress is impossible; since if either (a) or (b) were not a fact, it
would mean that no interval was immediate and indivisible, but that all
intervals were divisible. This is true because a conclusion is demonstrated by
the interposition, not the apposition, of a fresh term. If such interposition
could continue to infinity there might be an infinite number of terms between
any two terms; but this is impossible if both the ascending and descending
series of predication terminate; and of this fact, which before was shown
dialectically, analytic proof has now been given.
23 84b3 It is an evident corollary of these conclusions that if the same
attribute A inheres in two terms C and D predicable either not at all, or not of
all instances, of one another, it does not always belong to them in virtue of a
common middle term.
84b6 Isosceles and scalene
possess the attribute of having their angles equal to two right angles in virtue
of a common middle; for they possess it in so far as they are both a certain
kind of figure, and not in so far as they differ from one another. But this is
not always the case:
84b9 for, were it so, if
we take B as the common middle in virtue of which A inheres in C and D, clearly
B would inhere in C and D through a second common middle, and this in turn would
inhere in C and D through a third, so that between two terms an infinity of
intermediates would fall-an impossibility. Thus it need not always be in virtue
of a common middle term that a single attribute inheres in several subjects,
since there must be immediate intervals.
84b15 Yet if the attribute to be proved common to two subjects is to
be one of their essential attributes, the middle terms involved must be within
one subject genus and be derived from the same group of immediate premisses; for
we have seen that processes of proof cannot pass from one genus to another.
84b19 It is also clear that when A inheres in
B, this can be demonstrated if there is a middle term. Further, the ‘elements’
of such a conclusion are the premisses containing the middle in question, and
they are identical in number with the middle terms, seeing that the immediate
propositions-or at least such immediate propositions as are universal-are the
‘elements’. If, on the other hand, there is no middle term, demonstration ceases
to be possible: we are on the way to the basic truths.
84b24 Similarly if A does not inhere in B, this can be demonstrated
if there is a middle term or a term prior to B in which A does not inhere:
otherwise there is no demonstration and a basic truth is reached. There are,
moreover, as many ‘elements’ of the demonstrated conclusion as there are middle
terms, since it is propositions containing these middle terms that are the basic
premisses on which the demonstration rests; and as there are some indemonstrable
basic truths asserting that ‘this is that’ or that ‘this inheres in that’, so
there are others denying that ‘this is that’ or that ‘this inheres in that’-in
fact some basic truths will affirm and some will deny being.
84b32
When we are to prove a conclusion, we must take a primary
essential predicate-suppose it C-of the subject B, and then suppose A similarly
predicable of C. If we proceed in this manner, no proposition or attribute which
falls beyond A is admitted in the proof: the interval is constantly condensed
until subject and predicate become indivisible, i.e. one. We have our unit when
the premiss becomes immediate, since the immediate premiss alone is a single
premiss in the unqualified sense of ‘single’.
84b38 And as in other spheres the basic element is simple but not
identical in all-in a system of weight it is the mina, in music the
quarter-tone, and so on — so in syllogism the unit is an immediate premiss, and
in the knowledge that demonstration gives it is an intuition.
85a2 In syllogisms, then, which prove the
inherence of an attribute, nothing falls outside the major term.
85a3 In the case of negative syllogisms on the
other hand, (1) in the first figure nothing falls outside the major term whose
inherence is in question; e.g. to prove through a middle C that A does not
inhere in B the premisses required are, all B is C, no C is A. Then if it has to
be proved that no C is A, a middle must be found between and C; and this
procedure will never vary.
85a7 (2) If we have
to show that E is not D by means of the premisses, all D is C; no E, or not all
E, is C; then the middle will never fall beyond E, and E is the subject of which
D is to be denied in the conclusion.
85a10 (3)
In the third figure the middle will never fall beyond the limits of the subject
and the attribute denied of it.
24 85a12 Since
demonstrations may be either commensurately universal or particular, and either
affirmative or negative; the question arises, which form is the better? And the
same question may be put in regard to so-called ‘direct’ demonstration and
reductio ad impossibile.
85a17 Let us first
examine the commensurately universal and the particular forms, and when we have
cleared up this problem proceed to discuss ‘direct’ demonstration and reductio
ad impossibile.
85a20 The following
considerations might lead some minds to prefer particular demonstration. (1) The
superior demonstration is the demonstration which gives us greater knowledge
(for this is the ideal of demonstration), and we have greater knowledge of a
particular individual when we know it in itself than when we know it through
something else; e.g. we know Coriscus the musician better when we know that
Coriscus is musical than when we know only that man is musical, and a like
argument holds in all other cases. But commensurately universal demonstration,
instead of proving that the subject itself actually is x, proves only that
something else is x — e.g. in attempting to prove that isosceles is x, it proves
not that isosceles but only that triangle is x — whereas particular
demonstration proves that the subject itself is x. The demonstration, then, that
a subject, as such, possesses an attribute is superior. If this is so, and if
the particular rather than the commensurately universal
forms demonstrates, particular demonstration is superior.
85a31 (2) The universal has not a
separate being over against groups of singulars. Demonstration nevertheless
creates the opinion that its function is conditioned by something like this-some
separate entity belonging to the real world; that, for instance, of triangle or
of figure or number, over against particular triangles, figures, and numbers.
But demonstration which touches the real and will not mislead is superior to
that which moves among unrealities and is delusory. Now commensurately universal
demonstration is of the latter kind: if we engage in it we find ourselves
reasoning after a fashion well illustrated by the argument that the
proportionate is what answers to the definition of some entity which is neither
line, number, solid, nor plane, but a proportionate apart from all these. Since,
then, such a proof is characteristically commensurate and universal, and less
touches reality than does particular demonstration, and creates a false opinion,
it will follow that commensurate and universal is inferior to particular demonstration.
85b4 We
may retort thus. (1) The first argument applies no more to commensurate and
universal than to particular demonstration. If equality to two right angles is
attributable to its subject not qua isosceles but qua triangle, he who knows
that isosceles possesses that attribute knows the subject as qua itself
possessing the attribute, to a less degree than he who knows that triangle has
that attribute. To sum up the whole matter: if a subject is proved to possess
qua triangle an attribute which it does not in fact possess qua triangle, that
is not demonstration: but if it does possess it qua triangle the rule applies
that the greater knowledge is his who knows the subject as possessing its
attribute qua that in virtue of which it actually does possess it. Since, then,
triangle is the wider term, and there is one identical definition of
triangle-i.e. the term is not equivocal-and since equality to two right angles
belongs to all triangles, it is isosceles qua triangle and not triangle qua
isosceles which has its angles so related.
It follows that he who knows a connexion universally has greater knowledge of it as it in fact is
than he who knows the particular;
and the inference is that commensurate and universal is superior to particular demonstration.
85b15 (2) If there is a single identical
definition i.e. if the commensurate universal is unequivocal-then the universal
will possess being not less but more than some of the particulars, inasmuch as
it is universals which comprise the imperishable, particulars that tend to
perish.
85b18 (3) Because the universal has a
single meaning, we are not therefore compelled to suppose that in these examples
it has being as a substance apart from its particulars-any more than we need
make a similar supposition in the other cases of unequivocal universal
predication, viz. where the predicate signifies not substance but quality,
essential relatedness, or action. If such a supposition is entertained, the
blame rests not with the demonstration but with the hearer.
85b22
(4) Demonstration is syllogism that proves the cause, i.e.
the reasoned fact, and it is rather the commensurate universal than the
particular which is causative (as may be shown thus: that which possesses an
attribute through its own essential nature is itself the cause of the inherence,
and the commensurate universal is primary; hence the commensurate universal is
the cause). Consequently commensurately universal demonstration is superior as
more especially proving the cause, that is the reasoned
fact.
85b28 (5) Our search for the reason
ceases, and we think that we know, when the coming to be or existence of the
fact before us is not due to the coming to be or existence of some other fact,
for the last step of a search thus conducted is eo ipso the end and limit of the
problem. Thus: ‘Why did he come?’ ‘To get the money-wherewith to pay a debt-that
he might thereby do what was right.’ When in this regress we can no longer find
an efficient or final cause, we regard the last step of it as the end of the
coming-or being or coming to be-and we regard ourselves as then only having full
knowledge of the reason why he came. If, then, all causes and reasons are alike
in this respect, and if this is the means to full knowledge in the case of final
causes such as we have exemplified, it follows that in the case of the other
causes also full knowledge is attained when an attribute no longer inheres
because of something else. Thus, when we learn that exterior angles are equal to
four right angles because they are the exterior angles of an isosceles,
there still remains the question 'Why has isosceles this attribute?'
and its answer 'Because it is a triangle, and a triangle has it because a triangle is a rectilinear figure.'
If rectilinear figure possesses the property for no further reason, at this point we have full knowledge-
but at this point our knowledge has become commensurately universal, and so we conclude that
commensurately universal demonstration is superior.
86a3 (6) The more
demonstration becomes particular the more it sinks into an indeterminate
manifold, while universal demonstration tends to the simple and determinate. But
objects so far as they are an indeterminate manifold are unintelligible, so far
as they are determinate, intelligible: they are therefore intelligible rather in
so far as they are universal than in so far as they are particular. From this it
follows that universals are more demonstrable: but since relative and
correlative increase concomitantly, of the more demonstrable there will be
fuller demonstration. Hence the commensurate and universal form, being more
truly demonstration, is the superior.
86a11 (7) Demonstration which teaches two things is preferable to
demonstration which teaches only one. He who possesses commensurately universal
demonstration knows the particular as well, but he who possesses particular
demonstration does not know the universal. So that this is an additional reason
for preferring commensurately universal demonstration. And there is yet this
further argument:
86a14 (8) Proof becomes more
and more proof of the commensurate universal as its middle term approaches
nearer to the basic truth, and nothing is so near as the immediate premiss which
is itself the basic truth. If, then, proof from the basic truth is more accurate
than proof not so derived, demonstration which depends more closely on it is
more accurate than demonstration which is less closely dependent. But
commensurately universal demonstration is characterized by this closer
dependence, and is therefore superior. Thus, if A had to be proved to inhere in
D, and the middles were B and C, B being the higher term would render the
demonstration which it mediated the more universal. Some of these arguments,
however, are dialectical.
86a21 The clearest
indication of the precedence of commensurately universal demonstration is as
follows: if of two propositions, a prior and a posterior, we have a grasp of the
prior, we have a kind of knowledge-a potential grasp-of the posterior as well.
For example, if one knows that the angles of all triangles are equal to two
right angles, one knows in a sense-potentially-that the isosceles’ angles also
are equal to two right angles, even if one does not know that the isosceles is a
triangle; but to grasp this posterior proposition is by no means to know the
commensurate universal either potentially or actually.
86a28 Moreover, commensurately universal demonstration is through and
through intelligible; particular demonstration issues in sense-perception. 25
The preceding arguments constitute our defence of the superiority of
commensurately universal to particular demonstration.
86a32 That affirmative demonstration excels negative may be shown as
follows. (1) We may assume the superiority ceteris paribus of the demonstration
which derives from fewer postulates or hypotheses-in short from fewer premisses;
for, given that all these are equally well known, where they are fewer knowledge
will be more speedily acquired, and that is a desideratum. The argument implied
in our contention that demonstration from fewer assumptions is superior may be
set out in universal form as follows. Assuming that in both cases alike the
middle terms are known, and that middles which are prior are better known than
such as are posterior, we may suppose two demonstrations of the inherence of A
in E, the one proving it through the middles B, C and D, the other through F and
G. Then A-D is known to the same degree as A-E (in the second proof), but A-D is
better known than and prior to A-E (in the first proof); since A-E is proved
through A-D, and the ground is more certain than the
conclusion. Hence demonstration by fewer premisses is ceteris paribus superior. Now both affirmative and negative demonstration operate through three terms and two premisses, but whereas the former assumes only that something is, the latter assumes both that something is and that something else is not, and thus operating through more kinds of premiss is inferior.
86b10 (2) It has been proved that
no conclusion follows if both premisses are negative, but that one must be
negative, the other affirmative.
86b12 So we
are compelled to lay down the following additional rule: as the demonstration
expands, the affirmative premisses must increase in number, but there cannot be
more than one negative premiss in each complete proof. Thus, suppose no B is A,
and all C is B. Then if both the premisses are to be again expanded, a middle
must be interposed. Let us interpose D between A and B, and E between B and C.
Then clearly E is affirmatively related to B and C, while D is affirmatively
related to B but negatively to A; for all B is D, but there must be no D which
is A. Thus there proves to be a single negative premiss, A-D. In the further
prosyllogisms too it is the same, because in the terms of an affirmative
syllogism the middle is always related affirmatively to both extremes; in a
negative syllogism it must be negatively related only to one of them, and so
this negation comes to be a single negative premiss, the other premisses being
affirmative. If, then, that through which a truth is proved
is a better known and more certain truth, and if the negative proposition is proved through the affirmative and not vice versa, affirmative demonstration, being prior and better known and more certain, will be superior.
86b30 (3) The basic truth of demonstrative
syllogism is the universal immediate premiss, and the universal premiss asserts
in affirmative demonstration and in negative denies: and the affirmative
proposition is prior to and better known than the negative (since affirmation
explains denial and is prior to denial, just as being is prior to not-being). It
follows that the basic premiss of affirmative demonstration is superior to that
of negative demonstration, and the demonstration which uses superior basic
premisses is superior.
86b39 (4) Affirmative
demonstration is more of the nature of a basic form of proof, because it is a
sine qua non of negative demonstration.
26 87a1 Since affirmative demonstration is superior to negative, it is
clearly superior also to reductio ad impossibile.
87a2 We must first make certain what is the difference between
negative demonstration and reductio ad impossibile. Let us suppose that no B is
A, and that all C is B: the conclusion necessarily follows that no C is A. If
these premisses are assumed, therefore, the negative demonstration that no C is
A is direct.
87a7 Reductio ad impossibile, on
the other hand, proceeds as follows. Supposing we are to prove that does not
inhere in B, we have to assume that it does inhere, and further that B inheres
in C, with the resulting inference that A inheres in C. This we have to suppose
a known and admitted impossibility; and we then infer that A cannot inhere in B.
Thus if the inherence of B in C is not questioned, A’s inherence in B is
impossible.
87a13 The order of the terms is
the same in both proofs: they differ according to which of the negative
propositions is the better known, the one denying A of B or the one denying A of
C. When the falsity of the conclusion is the better known, we use reductio ad
impossible; when the major premiss of the syllogism is the more obvious, we use
direct demonstration.
87a17 All the same the
proposition denying A of B is, in the order of being, prior to that denying A of
C; for premisses are prior to the conclusion which follows from them, and ‘no C
is A’ is the conclusion, ‘no B is A’ one of its premisses.
87a19
For the destructive result of reductio ad impossibile is not
a proper conclusion, nor are its antecedents proper premisses. On the contrary:
the constituents of syllogism are premisses related to one another as whole to
part or part to whole, whereas the premisses A-C and A-B are not thus related to
one another. Now the superior demonstration is that which proceeds from better
known and prior premisses, and while both these forms depend for credence on the
not-being of something, yet the source of the one is prior to that of the other.
Therefore negative demonstration will have an unqualified superiority to
reductio ad impossibile, and affirmative demonstration, being superior to
negative, will consequently be superior also to reductio ad
impossibile.
27 87a31 The science which is
knowledge at once of the fact and of the reasoned fact, not of the fact by
itself without the reasoned fact, is the more exact and the prior science. A
science such as arithmetic, which is not a science of properties qua inhering in
a substratum, is more exact than and prior to a science like harmonics, which is
a science of pr,operties inhering in a substratum; and similarly a science like
arithmetic, which is constituted of fewer basic elements, is more exact than and
prior to geometry, which requires additional elements. What I mean by
‘additional elements’ is this: a unit is substance without position, while a
point is substance with position; the latter contains an additional
element.
28 87a38 A single science is one
whose domain is a single genus, viz. all the subjects constituted out of the
primary entities of the genus-i.e. the parts of this total subject-and their
essential properties.
87a41 One science
differs from another when their basic truths have neither a common source nor
are derived those of the one science from those the other.
87b1
This is verified when we reach the indemonstrable premisses
of a science, for they must be within one genus with its conclusions: and this
again is verified if the conclusions proved by means of them fall within one
genus-i.e. are homogeneous.
29 87b5 One can
have several demonstrations of the same connexion not only by taking from the
same series of predication middles which are other than the immediately cohering
term e.g. by taking C, D, and F severally to prove A-B— but also by taking a
middle from another series. Thus let A be change, D alteration of a property, B
feeling pleasure, and G relaxation. We can then without falsehood predicate D of
B and A of D, for he who is pleased suffers alteration of a property, and that
which alters a property changes. Again, we can predicate A of G without
falsehood, and G of B; for to feel pleasure is to relax, and to relax is to
change. So the conclusion can be drawn through middles which are different, i.e.
not in the same series-yet not so that neither of these middles is predicable of
the other, for they must both be attributable to some one subject.A further
point worth investigating is how many ways of proving the same conclusion can be
obtained by varying the figure.
30 87b19 There
is no knowledge by demonstration of chance conjunctions; for chance conjunctions
exist neither by necessity nor as general connexions but comprise what comes to
be as something distinct from these. Now demonstration is concerned only with
one or other of these two; for all reasoning proceeds from necessary or general
premisses, the conclusion being necessary if the premisses are necessary and
general if the premisses are general. Consequently, if chance conjunctions are
neither general nor necessary, they are not demonstrable.
31 87b28
Scientific knowledge is not possible through the act of
perception. Even if perception as a faculty is of ‘the such’ and not merely of a
‘this somewhat’, yet one must at any rate actually perceive a ‘this somewhat’,
and at a definite present place and time: but that which is commensurately
universal and true in all cases one cannot perceive, since it is not ‘this’ and
it is not ‘now’; if it were, it would not be commensurately universal-the term
we apply to what is always and everywhere. Seeing, therefore, that
demonstrations are commensurately universal and universals imperceptible, we
clearly cannot obtain scientific knowledge by the act of perception:
87b34 nay, it is obvious that even if it were
possible to perceive that a triangle has its angles equal to two right angles,
we should still be looking for a demonstration-we should not (as some say)
possess knowledge of it; for perception must be of a particular, whereas
scientific knowledge involves the recognition of the commensurate universal. So
if we were on the moon, and saw the earth shutting out the sun’s light, we
should not know the cause of the eclipse: we should perceive the present fact of
the eclipse, but not the reasoned fact at all, since the act of perception is
not of the commensurate universal. I do not, of course, deny that by watching
the frequent recurrence of this event we might, after tracking the commensurate
universal, possess a demonstration, for the commensurate universal is elicited
from the several groups of singulars.
88a5 The
commensurate universal is precious because it makes clear the cause; so that in
the case of facts like these which have a cause other than themselves universal
knowledge is more precious than sense-perceptions and than intuition. (As
regards primary truths there is of course a different account to be given.)
Hence it is clear that knowledge of things demonstrable cannot be acquired by
perception, unless the term perception is applied to the possession of
scientific knowledge through demonstration.
88a11 Nevertheless certain points do arise with regard to connexions
to be proved which are referred for their explanation to a failure in
sense-perception: there are cases when an act of vision would terminate our
inquiry, not because in seeing we should be knowing, but because we should have
elicited the universal from seeing; if, for example, we saw the pores in the
glass and the light passing through, the reason of the kindling would be clear
to us because we should at the same time see it in each instance and intuit that
it must be so in all instances.
32 88a18 All
syllogisms cannot have the same basic truths. This may be shown first of all by
the following dialectical considerations. (1) Some syllogisms are true and some
false:
88a20 for though a true inference is
possible from false premisses, yet this occurs once only-I mean if A for
instance, is truly predicable of C, but B, the middle, is false, both A-B and
B-C being false; nevertheless, if middles are taken to prove these premisses,
they will be false because every conclusion which is a falsehood has false
premisses, while true conclusions have true premisses, and false and true differ
in kind.
88a26 Then again, (2) falsehoods are
not all derived from a single identical set of principles: there are falsehoods
which are the contraries of one another and cannot coexist, e.g. ‘justice is
injustice’, and ‘justice is cowardice’; ‘man is horse’, and ‘man is ox’; ‘the
equal is greater’, and ‘the equal is less.’ From established principles we may
argue the case as follows, confining-ourselves therefore to true conclusions.
88a31 Not even all these are inferred from
the same basic truths; many of them in fact have basic truths which differ
generically and are not transferable; units, for instance, which are without
position, cannot take the place of points, which have position. The transferred
terms could only fit in as middle terms or as major or minor terms, or else have
some of the other terms between them, others outside them.
88a37
Nor can any of the common axioms-such, I mean, as the law of
excluded middle-serve as premisses for the proof of all conclusions. For the
kinds of being are different, and some attributes attach to quanta and some to
qualia only; and proof is achieved by means of the common axioms taken in
conjunction with these several kinds and their attributes.
88b4 Again, it is not true that the basic truths are much fewer than
the conclusions, for the basic truths are the premisses, and the premisses are
formed by the apposition of a fresh extreme term or the interposition of a fresh
middle. Moreover, the number of conclusions is indefinite, though the number of
middle terms is finite;
88b8 and lastly some
of the basic truths are necessary, others variable. Looking at it in this way we
see that, since the number of conclusions is indefinite, the basic truths cannot
be identical or limited in number.
88b10 If,
on the other hand, identity is used in another sense, and it is said, e.g.
‘these and no other are the fundamental truths of geometry, these the
fundamentals of calculation, these again of medicine’; would the statement mean
anything except that the sciences have basic truths? To call them identical
because they are self-identical is absurd, since everything can be identified
with everything in that sense of identity.
88b15 Nor again can the contention that all conclusions have the same
basic truths mean that from the mass of all possible premisses any conclusion
may be drawn. That would be exceedingly naive, for it is not the case in the
clearly evident mathematical sciences, nor is it possible in analysis, since it
is the immediate premisses which are the basic truths, and a fresh conclusion is
only formed by the addition of a new immediate premiss:
88b20 but if it be admitted that it is these primary immediate
premisses which are basic truths, each subject-genus will provide one basic
truth.
88b22 If, however, it is not argued
that from the mass of all possible premisses any conclusion may be proved, nor
yet admitted that basic truths differ so as to be generically different for each
science, it remains to consider the possibility that, while the basic truths of
all knowledge are within one genus, special premisses are required to prove
special conclusions.
88b25 But that this
cannot be the case has been shown by our proof that the basic truths of things
generically different themselves differ generically. For fundamental truths are
of two kinds, those which are premisses of demonstration and the subject-genus;
and though the former are common, the latter-number, for instance, and
magnitude-are peculiar.
33 88b30 Scientific
knowledge and its object differ from opinion and the object of opinion b3l in
that scientific knowledge is commensurately universal and proceeds by necessary
connexions, and that which is necessary cannot be otherwise.
88b33 So though there are things which are
true and real and yet can be otherwise, scientific knowledge clearly does not
concern them: if it did, things which can be otherwise would be incapable of
being otherwise. Nor are they any concern of rational intuition-by rational
intuition I mean an originative source of scientific knowledge-nor of
indemonstrable knowledge, which is the grasping of the immediate premiss. Since
then rational intuition, science, and opinion, and what is revealed by these
terms, are the only things that can be ‘true’, it follows that it is opinion
that is concerned with that which may be true or false, and can be otherwise:
opinion in fact is the grasp of a premiss which is immediate but not necessary.
89a5 This view also fits the observed facts,
for opinion is unstable, and so is the kind of being we have described as its
object.
89a7 Besides, when a man thinks a
truth incapable of being otherwise he always thinks that he knows it, never that
he opines it. He thinks that he opines when he thinks that a connexion, though
actually so, may quite easily be otherwise; for he believes that such is the
proper object of opinion, while the necessary is the object of
knowledge.
89a11 In what sense, then, can the
same thing be the object of both opinion and knowledge? And if any one chooses
to maintain that all that he knows he can also opine, why should not opinion be
knowledge? For he that knows and he that opines will follow the same train of
thought through the same middle terms until the immediate premisses are reached;
because it is possible to opine not only the fact but also the reasoned fact,
and the reason is the middle term;
89a16 so
that, since the former knows, he that opines also has knowledge. The truth
perhaps is that if a man grasp truths that cannot be other than they are, in the
way in which he grasps the definitions through which demonstrations take place,
he will have not opinion but knowledge: if on the other hand he apprehends these
attributes as inhering in their subjects, but not in virtue of the subjects’
substance and essential nature possesses opinion and not genuine knowledge; and
his opinion, if obtained through immediate premisses, will be both of the fact
and of the reasoned fact; if not so obtained, of the fact alone.
89a23 The object of opinion and knowledge is
not quite identical; it is only in a sense identical, just as the object of true
and false opinion is in a sense identical. The sense in which some maintain that
true and false opinion can have the same object leads them to embrace many
strange doctrines, particularly the doctrine that what a man opines falsely he
does not opine at all. There are really many senses of ‘identical’, and in one
sense the object of true and false opinion can be the same, in another it
cannot. Thus, to have a true opinion that the diagonal is commensurate with the
side would be absurd: but because the diagonal with which they are both
concerned is the same, the two opinions have objects so far the same: on the
other hand, as regards their essential definable nature these objects differ.
The identity of the objects of knowledge and opinion is similar. Knowledge is
the apprehension of, e.g. the attribute ‘animal’ as incapable of being
otherwise, opinion the apprehension of 'animal' as capable of being otherwise-e.g.
the apprehension that animal is an element in the essential nature of man is knowledge;
the apprehension of animal as predicable of man but not as an element in man's essential nature is opinion:
man is the subject in both judgements, but the mode of inherence differs.
This also shows that one cannot opine and know the same thing simultaneously; for then one would apprehend the same thing as both capable and incapable of being otherwise-an impossibility. Knowledge and opinion of the same thing can co-exist in two different people in the sense we have explained, but not simultaneously in the same person. That would involve a man's simultaneously apprehending, e.g. (1) that man is essentially animal-i.e. cannot be other than animal-and (2) that man is not essentially animal, that is, we may assume, may be other than animal.
89b6 Further consideration of modes of thinking and their
distribution under the heads of discursive thought, intuition, science, art,
practical wisdom, and metaphysical thinking, belongs rather partly to natural
science, partly to moral philosophy.
34 89b10 Quick wit is a faculty of hitting upon the middle term
instantaneously. It would be exemplified by a man who saw that the moon has her
bright side always turned towards the sun, and quickly grasped the cause of
this, namely that she borrows her light from him; or observed somebody in
conversation with a man of wealth and divined that he was borrowing money, or
that the friendship of these people sprang from a common enmity. In all these
instances he has seen the major and minor terms and then grasped the causes, the
middle terms. Let A represent ‘bright side turned sunward’, B ‘lighted from the
sun’, C the moon. Then B, ‘lighted from the sun’ is predicable of C, the moon,
and A, ‘having her bright side towards the source of her light’, is predicable
of B. So A is predicable of C through B.
Aristotle Posterior Analytics Book II
1 89b21 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.
89b26 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.
89b28 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;
89b32 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.
89b38 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.
90a2 (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.)
90a5 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.
90a24 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'.
90a36 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,
90b1 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.
90b3 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.
90b7 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.
90b14 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.
90b16 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.
90b19 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.
90b23 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.
90b28 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.
90b33 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.
90b38 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.
91a12 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.
91a14 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;
91a18 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:
91a19 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.
91a22 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.
91a25 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.
91a28 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.
91a32 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.
91a35 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.
91b1
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
91b12 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.)
91b25 For why should
not the whole of this formula be true of man, and yet not exhibit his essential
nature or definable form?
91b26 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?
91b28 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.
91b33 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 92a6 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?
92a9 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?
92a12 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.
92a20 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.
92a23 The question is begged because
definable form is assumed as a premiss,
92a24 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.
92a28 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
92a34 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?
92b3 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.
92b7 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?
92b11 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.
92b18 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.
92b26 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.
92b28 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:
92b30 (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:
92b32 (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.
92b35 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 93a1 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.
93a4 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-
93a16 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.
93a21 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.
93a24 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.
93a28 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.
93b15 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 93b22 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 93b28 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.
93b38 Another kind of definition
is a formula exhibiting the cause of a thing’s existence.
93b39
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.
94a2 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.
94a9 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.
94a13 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
94a20 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,
94a24 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.
94a28
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.
94a35 Moreover, the formal cause has already
been shown to be the middle.
94a36 (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.
94b8 (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.
94b23 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.
94b27 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?
94b35 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.
95a3 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,
95a7 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 95a10 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.
95a13 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.
95a23 But
what of cases where they are not simultaneous? Can causes and effects different
from one another form,
95a24 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?
95a27 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,
95a32 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.
95a35 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.
95a39 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.
95b1 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.
95b12 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,
95b23 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.
95b25 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.
95b31 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.
95b38 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.
96a2 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.
96a8 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.
96a12 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 96a20 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;
96a22 so let us
now discuss the method to be adopted in tracing the elements predicated as
constituting the definable form.
96a24 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.
96a32 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.
96a34 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.
96b2 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.
96b6 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.
96b15 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.
96b18 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.
96b25 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.
96b30 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.
96b35 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.
97a6 To define and divide one need not know the whole of existence.
97a7 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.
97a11 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.
97a13 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.
97a19 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.
97a23 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.
97a25 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.
97a28
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.
97a34 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.
97b1 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.
97b7 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.
97b15
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.
97b26 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.
97b28 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.
97b31 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.
97b38 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 98al 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.
98a13 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?
98a20 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 98a23 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.
98a29 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 98a35 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.
98b2 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
98b4 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.
98b16 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.
98b22 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.
98b25 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.
98b32 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 99a1 Can the cause of an
identical effect be not identical in every instance of the effect but different?
Or is that impossible?
99a2 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.
99a4 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.
99al7 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.
99a30 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 99b7 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 99b15 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.
99b18 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.
99b20 We have already said that scientific knowledge through
demonstration is impossible unless a man knows the primary immediate premisses.
99b23 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.
99b26 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.
99b28 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.
99b30 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.
99b32 Therefore we must possess a
capacity of some sort, but not such as to rank higher in accuracy than these
developed states.
99b34 And this at least is
an obvious characteristic of all animals, for they possess a congenital
discriminative capacity which is called sense-perception.
99b36
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:
100a1 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.
100a4 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.
100a14 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.
100b5 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.