登陆注册
15479500000002

第2章 1(2)

Nor is it possible to track back the series of necessary antecedents to a starting-point, of which you can say that, existing itself from eternity, it has determined their existence as its consequent. These however again, are matters that have been dealt with in another treatise. There too it was stated in what cases absolute and hypothetical necessity exist; in what cases also the proposition expressing hypothetical necessity is simply convertible, and what cause it is that determines this convertibility.

Another matter which must not be passed over without consideration is, whether the proper subject of our exposition is that with which the ancient writers concerned themselves, namely, what is the process of formation of each animal; or whether it is not rather, what are the characters of a given creature when formed. For there is no small difference between these two views. The best course appears to be that we should follow the method already mentioned, and begin with the phenomena presented by each group of animals, and, when this is done, proceed afterwards to state the causes of those phenomena, and to deal with their evolution. For elsewhere, as for instance in house building, this is the true sequence. The plan of the house, or the house, has this and that form; and because it has this and that form, therefore is its construction carried out in this or that manner. For the process of evolution is for the sake of the thing Anally evolved, and not this for the sake of the process.

Empedocles, then, was in error when he said that many of the characters presented by animals were merely the results of incidental occurrences during their development; for instance, that the backbone was divided as it is into vertebrae, because it happened to be broken owing to the contorted position of the foetus in the womb. In so saying he overlooked the fact that propagation implies a creative seed endowed with certain formative properties. Secondly, he neglected another fact, namely, that the parent animal pre-exists, not only in idea, but actually in time. For man is generated from man; and thus it is the possession of certain characters by the parent that determines the development of like characters in the child. The same statement holds good also for the operations of art, and even for those which are apparently spontaneous. For the same result as is produced by art may occur spontaneously. Spontaneity, for instance, may bring about the restoration of health. The products of art, however, require the pre-existence of an efficient cause homogeneous with themselves, such as the statuary's art, which must necessarily precede the statue; for this cannot possibly be produced spontaneously. Art indeed consists in the conception of the result to be produced before its realization in the material. As with spontaneity, so with chance; for this also produces the same result as art, and by the same process.

The fittest mode, then, of treatment is to say, a man has such and such parts, because the conception of a man includes their presence, and because they are necessary conditions of his existence, or, if we cannot quite say this, which would be best of all, then the next thing to it, namely, that it is either quite impossible for him to exist without them, or, at any rate, that it is better for him that they should be there; and their existence involves the existence of other antecedents. Thus we should say, because man is an animal with such and such characters, therefore is the process of his development necessarily such as it is; and therefore is it accomplished in such and such an order, this part being formed first, that next, and so on in succession; and after a like fashion should we explain the evolution of all other works of nature.

Now that with which the ancient writers, who first philosophized about Nature, busied themselves, was the material principle and the material cause. They inquired what this is, and what its character; how the universe is generated out of it, and by what motor influence, whether, for instance, by antagonism or friendship, whether by intelligence or spontaneous action, the substratum of matter being assumed to have certain inseparable properties; fire, for instance, to have a hot nature, earth a cold one; the former to be light, the latter heavy. For even the genesis of the universe is thus explained by them. After a like fashion do they deal also with the development of plants and of animals. They say, for instance, that the water contained in the body causes by its currents the formation of the stomach and the other receptacles of food or of excretion; and that the breath by its passage breaks open the outlets of the nostrils; air and water being the materials of which bodies are made; for all represent nature as composed of such or similar substances.

But if men and animals and their several parts are natural phenomena, then the natural philosopher must take into consideration not merely the ultimate substances of which they are made, but also flesh, bone, blood, and all other homogeneous parts; not only these, but also the heterogeneous parts, such as face, hand, foot; and must examine how each of these comes to be what it is, and in virtue of what force. For to say what are the ultimate substances out of which an animal is formed, to state, for instance, that it is made of fire or earth, is no more sufficient than would be a similar account in the case of a couch or the like. For we should not be content with saying that the couch was made of bronze or wood or whatever it might be, but should try to describe its design or mode of composition in preference to the material; or, if we did deal with the material, it would at any rate be with the concretion of material and form.

同类推荐
  • 尧山堂偶隽

    尧山堂偶隽

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 问花楼词话

    问花楼词话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • INSTRUMENTS OF REDUCTION

    INSTRUMENTS OF REDUCTION

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Message

    The Message

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 十住毗婆沙论

    十住毗婆沙论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 你和我遇见的那个初雪

    你和我遇见的那个初雪

    在一个初雪的晚上,女主角夜若雪在初雪那天遇到了那个让她心动的男孩,两人一见钟情,出乎意料的是两人竟然在一个学校,一个班级,女主夜若雪是个普普通通的学生,男主原诺是帅气的校草,两人的爱情路上难免会磕磕碰碰。。。。。。
  • 亘古传奇之陌殇

    亘古传奇之陌殇

    浮沉大地,恩怨情长,多少辉煌已成往事云烟;开天辟地,正义凛然,多少战乱毁灭无数英豪;泣歌悲舞,浑然天成,尘世儿女看遍尽红尘觞。神州大地自女娲创建以来,出现最大劫难,然而此时的人类,已经得不到诸神的帮助,完全的依靠自己的能力来对抗邪魔,人类究竟有什么法宝呢?她最后神者的后裔,出身高贵且殊荣,但她并没有被世俗牵绊,而是坚定的走着自己的道路,强化自我,提升修为;时而活泼,时而玩闹,时而温柔,她觉得生存在美丽富饶的神州大地是最幸福的事,同时伴随着邪魔的滋生,她要誓死守护美丽可爱的大地,所有的一切,因为爱。他是神界上古神者之一,也是神资最高,修为最深,力量最强的天神;然而奈何天地万物自然法规,拥有最强力量的他,竟拯救不了自己心爱之人,但却发现了一个可以超乎自然法则的她,完完全全的培养她,因为她可以在不违规自然法则的情况下救出心爱之人。他是妖族三王之一,淡泊名利,悠然自得的狼王;然而生活并不想让他就此平淡下去,给予诸多考验,让他遇到他今生最大的麻烦,就是她,那个眼中只有苍生大地的女孩,一直看着别人生活的女孩;即便女孩看着别人,他也不在意,因为人生最艰难的不是做出选择,而是做出选择前的犹豫不定,绞尽脑汁。
  • 喋血天涯

    喋血天涯

    在战火纷飞硝烟弥漫的二战时,日本强盗侵占我华夏热土,步步逼近,势如破竹,国家危亡,有多少国民无家可归,流离失所,亡命天涯。我的老太陈圣围和陈圣站兄弟俩,就是直截的受害者之一,他俩本来家乡在浙江,但在战火的逼迫下,不得不和亲人合家西逃,一路艰难险阻,亲眼看见亲人一个个倒在血泊中。只有他俩逃了出来,在当地乡亲们的帮助下,安居乐业。然而,为了守卫一方安宁,且和土匪干了起来,拼了一个鱼死网破,树立了大男
  • 外科方外奇方

    外科方外奇方

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 花斋幽梦

    花斋幽梦

    现代版《聊斋志异》,对的,作者想写一部新的《聊斋志异》,本小说将由多篇独立故事组成,拒绝灌水,简单好看是作者君的追求。温暖治愈、人性善恶、虐恋悲惨、霸道废材……皆有之。作者是来圆梦的,每个人心里都有一个聊斋。《我的蛇精女孩》《我的女友是声优》............未完待续……
  • 魔王教师

    魔王教师

    王不二,一个极度懦弱的本科毕业生,在机缘巧合之下进入了一所名门高中担任数学老师兼班主任,却没想到他所教的班级是一个名副其实的死亡班级,面对学生们的各种刁难,王不二遭受了接二连三的打击,正当他走投无路,却被一辆凯迪拉克撞晕了,等他醒过来忽然发现自己恢复了自己前一世的记忆,而自己的前一世竟然是一个大魔王……前世的自己到底是被何人所害,而他又该怎么复仇?
  • 凤离之传

    凤离之传

    七大教派,三界中,大战在即,一位孤儿被收留,却不知这是一场阴谋?傲看三界,为谁独尊?
  • 晨夕雨季

    晨夕雨季

    人生路漫长,有些路只有坚持着走下去,才能看到最真实的美丽。
  • 笔友回信,拽妻很难追

    笔友回信,拽妻很难追

    她原本只是普通的农村女孩i,却遇到偶像剧里的一幕,面对他的亲戚好友,她觉得有些好笑,问道:“十万如何?”面对十万支票,她却说:“抱歉,这太高文化,我不懂,也不想懂。”面对十万银行卡,她又说:“不好意思,这卡不是我自己的身份证登记的,我不要,被别人当成小偷就不好了,你还是给我现金吧。”十万现金在她面前,道了声谢,拿走,没十分钟,却拨了电话给那罪魁祸首,“银行卡号,我最近认识了个黑客高手,说只要知道卡号,就能把别人的钱全部转到自己卡里,我想试试,怎样,敢给吗?”
  • 烟水寒,相思枫叶丹

    烟水寒,相思枫叶丹

    山一重两重,层峦叠嶂,就如同心中的相思层层叠叠,连绵不绝.山远天高望不到尽头,就如同相思无际无涯.而寒的不仅仅是烟雾深锁的水面,更是思人的心情.相思日久,已到暮秋,枫叶正红,而红不过相思之苦.