Plato
TIMAEUS
translated
by Benjamin Jowett
Persons of the
Dialogue :
SOCRATES ; CRITIAS ; TIMAEUS ; HERMOCRATES.
Socrates. One, two,
three ; but where, my dear Timaeus, is the fourth of those who were
yesterday my guests and are to be my entertainers to-day ?
Timaeus. He has been taken
ill, Socrates ; for he would not willingly have been absent from this
gathering.
Soc. Then, if he is not
coming, you and the two others must supply his place.
Tim. Certainly, and we
will do all that we can ; having been handsomely entertained by you
yesterday, those of us who remain should be only too glad to return your
hospitality.
Soc. Do you remember
what were the points of which I required you to speak ?
Tim. We remember some
of them, and you will be here to remind us of anything which we have
forgotten : or rather, if we are not troubling you, will you briefly
recapitulate the whole, and then the particulars will be more firmly fixed in
our memories ?
Soc. To be sure I
will : the chief theme of my yesterday’s discourse was the State — how
constituted and of what citizens composed it would seem likely to be most
perfect.
Tim. Yes,
Socrates ; and what you said of it was very much to our mind.
Soc. Did we not begin
by separating the husbandmen and the artisans from the class of defenders of
the State ?
Tim. Yes.
Soc. And when we had
given to each one that single employment and particular art which was suited to
his nature, we spoke of those who were intended to be our warriors, and said
that they were to be guardians of the city against attacks from within as well
as from without, and to have no other employment ; they were to be
merciful in judging their subjects, of whom they were by nature friends, but
fierce to their enemies, when they came across them in battle.
Tim. Exactly.
Soc. We said, if I am
not mistaken, that the guardians should be gifted with a temperament in a high
degree both passionate and philosophical ; and that then they would be as
they ought to be, gentle to their friends and fierce with their enemies.
Tim. Certainly.
Soc. And what did we
say of their education ? Were they not to be trained in gymnastic, and
music, and all other sorts of knowledge which were proper for them ?
Tim. Very true.
Soc. And being thus
trained they were not to consider gold or silver or anything else to be their
own private property ; they were to be like hired troops, receiving pay
for keeping guard from those who were protected by them — the pay was to be no
more than would suffice for men of simple life ; and they were to spend in
common, and to live together in the continual practice of virtue, which was to
be their sole pursuit.
Tim. That was also
said.
Soc. Neither did we
forget the women ; of whom we declared, that their natures should be
assimilated and brought into harmony with those of the men, and that common
pursuits should be assigned to them both in time of war and in their ordinary
life.
Tim. That, again, was
as you say.
Soc. And what about the
procreation of children ? Or rather not the proposal too singular to be
forgotten ? for all wives and children were to be in common, to the intent
that no one should ever know his own child, but they were to imagine that they
were all one family ; those who were within a suitable limit of age were
to be brothers and sisters, those who were of an elder generation parents and
grandparents, and those of a younger children and grandchildren.
Tim. Yes, and the
proposal is easy to remember, as you say.
Soc. And do you also
remember how, with a view of securing as far as we could the best breed, we
said that the chief magistrates, male and female, should contrive secretly, by
the use of certain lots, so to arrange the nuptial meeting, that the bad of
either sex and the good of either sex might pair with their like ; and
there was to be no quarrelling on this account, for they would imagine that the
union was a mere accident, and was to be attributed to the lot ?
Tim. I remember.
Soc. And you remember
how we said that the children of the good parents were to be educated, and the
children of the bad secretly dispersed among the inferior citizens ; and
while they were all growing up the rulers were to be on the look-out, and to
bring up from below in their turn those who were worthy, and those among
themselves who were unworthy were to take the places of those who came up ?
Tim. True.
Soc. Then have I now
given you all the heads of our yesterday’s discussion ? Or is there
anything more, my dear Timaeus, which has been omitted ?
Tim. Nothing,
Socrates ; it was just as you have said.
Soc. I should like,
before proceeding further, to tell you how I feel about the State which we have
described. I might compare myself to a person who, on beholding beautiful
animals either created by the painter’s art, or, better still, alive but at
rest, is seized with a desire of seeing them in motion or engaged in some
struggle or conflict to which their forms appear suited ; this is my
feeling about the State which we have been describing. There are conflicts
which all cities undergo, and I should like to hear some one tell of our own city
carrying on a struggle against her neighbours, and how she went out to war in a
becoming manner, and when at war showed by the greatness of her actions and the
magnanimity of her words in dealing with other cities a result worthy of her
training and education. Now I, Critias and Hermocrates, am conscious that I
myself should never be able to celebrate the city and her citizens in a
befitting manner, and I am not surprised at my own incapacity ; to me the
wonder is rather that the poets present as well as past are no better — not
that I mean to depreciate them ; but every one can see that they are a
tribe of imitators, and will imitate best and most easily the life in which
they have been brought up ; while that which is beyond the range of a
man’s education he finds hard to carry out in action, and still harder
adequately to represent in language. I am aware that the Sophists have plenty
of brave words and fair conceits, but I am afraid that being only wanderers
from one city to another, and having never had habitations of their own, they
may fail in their conception of philosophers and statesmen, and may not know
what they do and say in time of war, when they are fighting or holding parley
with their enemies. And thus people of your class are the only ones remaining
who are fitted by nature and education to take part at once both in politics
and philosophy. Here is Timaeus, of Locris in Italy, a city which has admirable
laws, and who is himself in wealth and rank the equal of any of his
fellow-citizens ; he has held the most important and honourable offices in
his own state, and, as I believe, has scaled the heights of all
philosophy ; and here is Critias, whom every Athenian knows to be no
novice in the matters of which we are speaking ; and as to, Hermocrates, I
am assured by many witnesses that his genius and education qualify him to take
part in any speculation of the kind. And therefore yesterday when I saw that
you wanted me to describe the formation of the State, I readily assented, being
very well aware, that, if you only would, none were better qualified to carry
the discussion further, and that when you had engaged our city in a suitable
war, you of all men living could best exhibit her playing a fitting part. When
I had completed my task, I in return imposed this other task upon you. You
conferred together and agreed to entertain me to-day, as I had entertained you,
with a feast of discourse. Here am I in festive array, and no man can be more
ready for the promised banquet.
Hermocrates. And we too,
Socrates, as Timaeus says, will not be wanting in enthusiasm ; and there
is no excuse for not complying with your request. As soon as we arrived
yesterday at the guest-chamber of Critias, with whom we are staying, or rather
on our way thither, we talked the matter over, and he told us an ancient
tradition, which I wish, Critias, that you would repeat to Socrates, so that he
may help us to judge whether it will satisfy his requirements or not.
Critias. I will, if
Timaeus, who is our other partner, approves.
Tim. I quite approve.
Crit. Then listen,
Socrates, to a tale which, though strange, is certainly true, having been
attested by Solon, who was the wisest of the seven sages. He was a relative and
a dear friend of my great-grandfather, Dropides, as he himself says in many
passages of his poems ; and he told the story to Critias, my grandfather,
who remembered and repeated it to us. There were of old, he said, great and
marvellous actions of the Athenian city, which have passed into oblivion
through lapse of time and the destruction of mankind, and one in particular,
greater than all the rest. This we will now rehearse. It will be a fitting
monument of our gratitude to you, and a hymn of praise true and worthy of the
goddess, on this her day of festival.
Soc. Very good. And
what is this ancient famous action of the Athenians, which Critias declared, on
the authority of Solon, to be not a mere legend, but an actual fact ?
Crit. I will tell an
old-world story which I heard from an aged man ; for Critias, at the time
of telling it, was as he said, nearly ninety years of age, and I was about ten.
Now the day was that day of the Apaturia which is called the Registration of
Youth, at which, according to custom, our parents gave prizes for recitations,
and the poems of several poets were recited by us boys, and many of us sang the
poems of Solon, which at that time had not gone out of fashion. One of our
tribe, either because he thought so or to please Critias, said that in his
judgment Solon was not only the wisest of men, but also the noblest of poets.
The old man, as I very well remember, brightened up at hearing this and said,
smiling : “Yes, Amynander, if Solon had only, like other poets, made
poetry the business of his life, and had completed the tale which he brought
with him from Egypt, and had not been compelled, by reason of the factions and
troubles which he found stirring in his own country when he came home, to
attend to other matters, in my opinion he would have been as famous as Homer or
Hesiod, or any poet.” “And what was the tale about, Critias ?” said
Amynander. “About the greatest action which the Athenians ever did, and which
ought to have been the most famous, but, through the lapse of time and the
destruction of the actors, it has not come down to us.” “Tell us, said the
other, the whole story, and how and from whom Solon heard this veritable
tradition.”
He replied : —
In the Egyptian Delta, at the head of which the river Nile divides, there is a
certain district which is called the district of Sais, and the great city of
the district is also called Sais, and is the city from which King Amasis came.
The citizens have a deity for their foundress ; she is called in the
Egyptian tongue Neith, and is asserted by them to be the same whom the Hellenes
call Athene ; they are great lovers of the Athenians, and say that they
are in some way related to them. To this city came Solon, and was received
there with great honour ; he asked the priests who were most skilful in
such matters, about antiquity, and made the discovery that neither he nor any
other Hellene knew anything worth mentioning about the times of old. On one
occasion, wishing to draw them on to speak of antiquity, he began to tell about
the most ancient things in our part of the world — about Phoroneus, who is called
“the first man,” and about Niobe ; and after the Deluge, of the survival
of Deucalion and Pyrrha ; and he traced the genealogy of their
descendants, and reckoning up the dates, tried to compute how many years ago
the events of which he was speaking happened. Thereupon one of the priests, who
was of a very great age, said : “O Solon, Solon, you Hellenes are never
anything but children, and there is not an old man among you.” Solon in return
asked him what he meant.
“I mean to say, he
replied, that in mind you are all young ; there is no old opinion handed
down among you by ancient tradition, nor any science which is hoary with age.
And I will tell you why. There have been, and will be again, many destructions
of mankind arising out of many causes ; the greatest have been brought
about by the agencies of fire and water, and other lesser ones by innumerable
other causes. There is a story, which even you have preserved, that once upon a
time Paethon, the son of Helios, having yoked the steeds in his father’s
chariot, because he was not able to drive them in the path of his father, burnt
up all that was upon the earth, and was himself destroyed by a thunderbolt. Now
this has the form of a myth, but really signifies a declination of the bodies
moving in the heavens around the earth, and a great conflagration of things
upon the earth, which recurs after long intervals ; at such times those
who live upon the mountains and in dry and lofty places are more liable to
destruction than those who dwell by rivers or on the seashore. And from this
calamity the Nile, who is our never-failing saviour, delivers and preserves us.
When, on the other hand, the gods purge the earth with a deluge of water, the
survivors in your country are herdsmen and shepherds who dwell on the
mountains, but those who, like you, live in cities are carried by the rivers
into the sea. Whereas in this land, neither then nor at any other time, does
the water come down from above on the fields, having always a tendency to come
up from below ; for which reason the traditions preserved here are the
most ancient.
The fact is, that
wherever the extremity of winter frost or of summer does not prevent, mankind
exist, sometimes in greater, sometimes in lesser numbers. And whatever happened
either in your country or in ours, or in any other region of which we are
informed — if there were any actions noble or great or in any other way
remarkable, they have all been written down by us of old, and are preserved in
our temples. Whereas just when you and other nations are beginning to be
provided with letters and the other requisites of civilized life, after the
usual interval, the stream from heaven, like a pestilence, comes pouring down,
and leaves only those of you who are destitute of letters and education ;
and so you have to begin all over again like children, and know nothing of what
happened in ancient times, either among us or among yourselves. As for those
genealogies of yours which you just now recounted to us, Solon, they are no
better than the tales of children. In the first place you remember a single
deluge only, but there were many previous ones ; in the next place, you do
not know that there formerly dwelt in your land the fairest and noblest race of
men which ever lived, and that you and your whole city are descended from a
small seed or remnant of them which survived. And this was unknown to you,
because, for many generations, the survivors of that destruction died, leaving
no written word. For there was a time, Solon, before the great deluge of all,
when the city which now is Athens was first in war and in every way the best
governed of all cities, is said to have performed the noblest deeds and to have
had the fairest constitution of any of which tradition tells, under the face of
heaven.”
Solon marvelled at
his words, and earnestly requested the priests to inform him exactly and in
order about these former citizens. “You are welcome to hear about them, Solon,
said the priest, both for your own sake and for that of your city, and above
all, for the sake of the goddess who is the common patron and parent and
educator of both our cities. She founded your city a thousand years before
ours, receiving from the Earth and Hephaestus the seed of your race, and
afterwards she founded ours, of which the constitution is recorded in our
sacred registers to be eight thousand years old. As touching your citizens of
nine thousand years ago, I will briefly inform you of their laws and of their
most famous action ; the exact particulars of the whole we will hereafter go
through at our leisure in the sacred registers themselves. If you compare these
very laws with ours you will find that many of ours are the counterpart of
yours as they were in the olden time. In the first place, there is the caste of
priests, which is separated from all the others ; next, there are the
artificers, who ply their several crafts by themselves and do not
intermix ; and also there is the class of shepherds and of hunters, as
well as that of husbandmen ; and you will observe, too, that the warriors
in Egypt are distinct from all the other classes, and are commanded by the law
to devote themselves solely to military pursuits ; moreover, the weapons
which they carry are shields and spears, a style of equipment which the goddess
taught of Asiatics first to us, as in your part of the world first to you. Then
as to wisdom, do you observe how our law from the very first made a study of
the whole order of things, extending even to prophecy and medicine which gives
health, out of these divine elements deriving what was needful for human life,
and adding every sort of knowledge which was akin to them. All this order and
arrangement the goddess first imparted to you when establishing your
city ; and she chose the spot of earth in which you were born, because she
saw that the happy temperament of the seasons in that land would produce the
wisest of men. Wherefore the goddess, who was a lover both of war and of
wisdom, selected and first of all settled that spot which was the most likely
to produce men likest herself. And there you dwelt, having such laws as these
and still better ones, and excelled all mankind in all virtue, as became the
children and disciples of the gods.
Many great and
wonderful deeds are recorded of your state in our histories. But one of them
exceeds all the rest in greatness and valour. For these histories tell of a
mighty power which unprovoked made an expedition against the whole of Europe
and Asia, and to which your city put an end. This power came forth out of the
Atlantic Ocean, for in those days the Atlantic was navigable ; and there
was an island situated in front of the straits which are by you called the
Pillars of Heracles ; the island was larger than Libya and Asia put
together, and was the way to other islands, and from these you might pass to
the whole of the opposite continent which surrounded the true ocean ; for
this sea which is within the Straits of Heracles is only a harbour, having a
narrow entrance, but that other is a real sea, and the surrounding land may be most
truly called a boundless continent. Now in this island of Atlantis there was a
great and wonderful empire which had rule over the whole island and several
others, and over parts of the continent, and, furthermore, the men of Atlantis
had subjected the parts of Libya within the columns of Heracles as far as
Egypt, and of Europe as far as Tyrrhenia. This vast power, gathered into one,
endeavoured to subdue at a blow our country and yours and the whole of the
region within the straits ; and then, Solon, your country shone forth, in
the excellence of her virtue and strength, among all mankind. She was
pre-eminent in courage and military skill, and was the leader of the Hellenes.
And when the rest fell off from her, being compelled to stand alone, after
having undergone the very extremity of danger, she defeated and triumphed over
the invaders, and preserved from slavery those who were not yet subjugated, and
generously liberated all the rest of us who dwell within the pillars. But
afterwards there occurred violent earthquakes and floods ; and in a single
day and night of misfortune all your warlike men in a body sank into the earth,
and the island of Atlantis in like manner disappeared in the depths of the sea.
For which reason the sea in those parts is impassable and impenetrable, because
there is a shoal of mud in the way ; and this was caused by the subsidence
of the island.”
I have told you
briefly, Socrates, what the aged Critias heard from Solon and related to us.
And when you were speaking yesterday about your city and citizens, the tale
which I have just been repeating to you came into my mind, and I remarked with
astonishment how, by some mysterious coincidence, you agreed in almost every
particular with the narrative of Solon ; but I did not like to speak at
the moment. For a long time had elapsed, and I had forgotten too much ; I
thought that I must first of all run over the narrative in my own mind, and
then I would speak. And so I readily assented to your request yesterday,
considering that in all such cases the chief difficulty is to find a tale
suitable to our purpose, and that with such a tale we should be fairly well
provided.
And therefore, as
Hermocrates has told you, on my way home yesterday I at once communicated the
tale to my companions as I remembered it ; and after I left them, during
the night by thinking I recovered nearly the whole it. Truly, as is often said,
the lessons of our childhood make wonderful impression on our memories ;
for I am not sure that I could remember all the discourse of yesterday, but I
should be much surprised if I forgot any of these things which I have heard
very long ago. I listened at the time with childlike interest to the old man’s
narrative ; he was very ready to teach me, and I asked him again and again
to repeat his words, so that like an indelible picture they were branded into
my mind. As soon as the day broke, I rehearsed them as he spoke them to my
companions, that they, as well as myself, might have something to say. And now,
Socrates, to make an end my preface, I am ready to tell you the whole tale. I
will give you not only the general heads, but the particulars, as they were
told to me. The city and citizens, which you yesterday described to us in
fiction, we will now transfer to the world of reality. It shall be the ancient
city of Athens, and we will suppose that the citizens whom you imagined, were
our veritable ancestors, of whom the priest spoke ; they will perfectly
harmonise, and there will be no inconsistency in saying that the citizens of
your republic are these ancient Athenians. Let us divide the subject among us,
and all endeavour according to our ability gracefully to execute the task which
you have imposed upon us. Consider then, Socrates, if this narrative is suited
to the purpose, or whether we should seek for some other instead.
Soc. And what other,
Critias, can we find that will be better than this, which is natural and
suitable to the festival of the goddess, and has the very great advantage of
being a fact and not a fiction ? How or where shall we find another if we
abandon this ? We cannot, and therefore you must tell the tale, and good
luck to you ; and I in return for my yesterday’s discourse will now rest
and be a listener.
Crit. Let me proceed to
explain to you, Socrates, the order in which we have arranged our
entertainment. Our intention is, that Timaeus, who is the most of an astronomer
amongst us, and has made the nature of the universe his special study, should
speak first, beginning with the generation of the world and going down to the
creation of man ; next, I am to receive the men whom he has created of
whom some will have profited by the excellent education which you have given
them ; and then, in accordance with the tale of Solon, and equally with
his law, we will bring them into court and make them citizens, as if they were
those very Athenians whom the sacred Egyptian record has recovered from
oblivion, and thenceforward we will speak of them as Athenians and
fellow-citizens.
Soc. I see that I shall
receive in my turn a perfect and splendid feast of reason. And now, Timaeus,
you, I suppose, should speak next, after duly calling upon the Gods.
Tim. All men, Socrates,
who have any degree of right feeling, at the beginning of every enterprise,
whether small or great, always call upon God. And we, too, who are going to
discourse of the nature of the universe, how created or how existing without
creation, if we be not altogether out of our wits, must invoke the aid of Gods
and Goddesses and pray that our words may be acceptable to them and consistent
with themselves. Let this, then, be our invocation of the Gods, to which I add
an exhortation of myself to speak in such manner as will be most intelligible
to you, and will most accord with my own intent.
First then, in my
judgment, we must make a distinction and ask, What is that which always is and
has no becoming ; and what is that which is always becoming and never
is ? That which is apprehended by intelligence and reason is always in the
same state ; but that which is conceived by opinion with the help of
sensation and without reason, is always in a process of becoming and perishing
and never really is. Now everything that becomes or is created must of
necessity be created by some cause, for without a cause nothing can be created.
The work of the creator, whenever he looks to the unchangeable and fashions the
form and nature of his work after an unchangeable pattern, must necessarily be
made fair and perfect ; but when he looks to the created only, and uses a
created pattern, it is not fair or perfect. Was the heaven then or the world,
whether called by this or by any other more appropriate name — assuming the
name, I am asking a question which has to be asked at the beginning of an
enquiry about anything — was the world, I say, always in existence and without
beginning ? or created, and had it a beginning ? Created, I reply,
being visible and tangible and having a body, and therefore sensible ; and
all sensible things are apprehended by opinion and sense and are in a process
of creation and created. Now that which is created must, as we affirm, of
necessity be created by a cause. But the father and maker of all this universe
is past finding out ; and even if we found him, to tell of him to all men
would be impossible. And there is still a question to be asked about him :
Which of the patterns had the artificer in view when he made the world — the
pattern of the unchangeable, or of that which is created ? If the world be
indeed fair and the artificer good, it is manifest that he must have looked to
that which is eternal ; but if what cannot be said without blasphemy is
true, then to the created pattern. Every one will see that he must have looked
to, the eternal ; for the world is the fairest of creations and he is the
best of causes. And having been created in this way, the world has been framed
in the likeness of that which is apprehended by reason and mind and is
unchangeable, and must therefore of necessity, if this is admitted, be a copy
of something. Now it is all-important that the beginning of everything should
be according to nature. And in speaking of the copy and the original we may
assume that words are akin to the matter which they describe ; when they
relate to the lasting and permanent and intelligible, they ought to be lasting and
unalterable, and, as far as their nature allows, irrefutable and immovable —
nothing less. But when they express only the copy or likeness and not the
eternal things themselves, they need only be likely and analogous to the real
words. As being is to becoming, so is truth to belief. If then, Socrates, amid
the many opinions about the gods and the generation of the universe, we are not
able to give notions which are altogether and in every respect exact and
consistent with one another, do not be surprised. Enough, if we adduce
probabilities as likely as any others ; for we must remember that I who am
the speaker, and you who are the judges, are only mortal men, and we ought to
accept the tale which is probable and enquire no further.
Soc. Excellent,
Timaeus ; and we will do precisely as you bid us. The prelude is charming,
and is already accepted by us — may we beg of you to proceed to the
strain ?
Tim. Let me tell you
then why the creator made this world of generation. He was good, and the good
can never have any jealousy of anything. And being free from jealousy, he
desired that all things should be as like himself as they could be. This is in
the truest sense the origin of creation and of the world, as we shall do well
in believing on the testimony of wise men : God desired that all things
should be good and nothing bad, so far as this was attainable. Wherefore also
finding the whole visible sphere not at rest, but moving in an irregular and
disorderly fashion, out of disorder he brought order, considering that this was
in every way better than the other. Now the deeds of the best could never be or
have been other than the fairest ; and the creator, reflecting on the
things which are by nature visible, found that no unintelligent creature taken
as a whole was fairer than the intelligent taken as a whole ; and that
intelligence could not be present in anything which was devoid of soul. For
which reason, when he was framing the universe, he put intelligence in soul,
and soul in body, that he might be the creator of a work which was by nature
fairest and best. Wherefore, using the language of probability, we may say that
the world became a living creature truly endowed with soul and intelligence by
the providence of God.
This being
supposed, let us proceed to the next stage : In the likeness of what
animal did the Creator make the world ? It would be an unworthy thing to
liken it to any nature which exists as a part only ; for nothing can be
beautiful which is like any imperfect thing ; but let us suppose the world
to be the very image of that whole of which all other animals both individually
and in their tribes are portions. For the original of the universe contains in
itself all intelligible beings, just as this world comprehends us and all other
visible creatures. For the Deity, intending to make this world like the fairest
and most perfect of intelligible beings, framed one visible animal
comprehending within itself all other animals of a kindred nature. Are we right
in saying that there is one world, or that they are many and infinite ?
There must be one only, if the created copy is to accord with the original. For
that which includes all other intelligible creatures cannot have a second or
companion ; in that case there would be need of another living being which
would include both, and of which they would be parts, and the likeness would be
more truly said to resemble not them, but that other which included them. In
order then that the world might be solitary, like the perfect animal, the creator
made not two worlds or an infinite number of them ; but there is and ever
will be one only-begotten and created heaven.
Now that which is
created is of necessity corporeal, and also visible and tangible. And nothing
is visible where there is no fire, or tangible which has no solidity, and
nothing is solid without earth. Wherefore also God in the beginning of creation
made the body of the universe to consist of fire and earth. But two things
cannot be rightly put together without a third ; there must be some bond
of union between them. And the fairest bond is that which makes the most
complete fusion of itself and the things which it combines ; and
proportion is best adapted to effect such a union. For whenever in any three
numbers, whether cube or square, there is a mean, which is to the last term
what the first term is to it ; and again, when the mean is to the first
term as the last term is to the mean — then the mean becoming first and last,
and the first and last both becoming means, they will all of them of necessity
come to be the same, and having become the same with one another will be all
one. If the universal frame had been created a surface only and having no
depth, a single mean would have sufficed to bind together itself and the other
terms ; but now, as the world must be solid, and solid bodies are always
compacted not by one mean but by two, God placed water and air in the mean
between fire and earth, and made them to have the same proportion so far as was
possible (as fire is to air so is air to water, and as air is to water so is
water to earth) ; and thus he bound and put together a visible and
tangible heaven. And for these reasons, and out of such elements which are in
number four, the body of the world was created, and it was harmonised by
proportion, and therefore has the spirit of friendship ; and having been
reconciled to itself, it was indissoluble by the hand of any other than the
framer.
Now the creation
took up the whole of each of the four elements ; for the Creator
compounded the world out of all the fire and all the water and all the air and
all the earth, leaving no part of any of them nor any power of them outside.
His intention was, in the first place, that the animal should be as far as
possible a perfect whole and of perfect parts : secondly, that it should
be one, leaving no remnants out of which another such world might be
created : and also that it should be free from old age and unaffected by
disease. Considering that if heat and cold and other powerful forces which unite
bodies surround and attack them from without when they are unprepared, they
decompose them, and by bringing diseases and old age upon them, make them waste
away — for this cause and on these grounds he made the world one whole, having
every part entire, and being therefore perfect and not liable to old age and
disease. And he gave to the world the figure which was suitable and also
natural. Now to the animal which was to comprehend all animals, that figure was
suitable which comprehends within itself all other figures. Wherefore he made
the world in the form of a globe, round as from a lathe, having its extremes in
every direction equidistant from the centre, the most perfect and the most like
itself of all figures ; for he considered that the like is infinitely
fairer than the unlike. This he finished off, making the surface smooth all
around for many reasons ; in the first place, because the living being had
no need of eyes when there was nothing remaining outside him to be seen ;
nor of ears when there was nothing to be heard ; and there was no
surrounding atmosphere to be breathed ; nor would there have been any use
of organs by the help of which he might receive his food or get rid of what he
had already digested, since there was nothing which went from him or came into
him : for there was nothing beside him. Of design he was created thus, his
own waste providing his own food, and all that he did or suffered taking place
in and by himself. For the Creator conceived that a being which was self-sufficient
would be far more excellent than one which lacked anything ; and, as he
had no need to take anything or defend himself against any one, the Creator did
not think it necessary to bestow upon him hands : nor had he any need of
feet, nor of the whole apparatus of walking ; but the movement suited to
his spherical form was assigned to him, being of all the seven that which is
most appropriate to mind and intelligence ; and he was made to move in the
same manner and on the same spot, within his own limits revolving in a circle.
All the other six motions were taken away from him, and he was made not to
partake of their deviations. And as this circular movement required no feet,
the universe was created without legs and without feet.
Such was the whole
plan of the eternal God about the god that was to be, to whom for this reason
he gave a body, smooth and even, having a surface in every direction
equidistant from the centre, a body entire and perfect, and formed out of
perfect bodies. And in the centre he put the soul, which he diffused throughout
the body, making it also to be the exterior environment of it ; and he
made the universe a circle moving in a circle, one and solitary, yet by reason
of its excellence able to converse with itself, and needing no other friendship
or acquaintance. Having these purposes in view he created the world a blessed
god.
Now God did not
make the soul after the body, although we are speaking of them in this
order ; for having brought them together he would never have allowed that
the elder should be ruled by the younger ; but this is a random manner of
speaking which we have, because somehow we ourselves too are very much under
the dominion of chance. Whereas he made the soul in origin and excellence prior
to and older than the body, to be the ruler and mistress, of whom the body was
to be the subject. And he made her out of the following elements and on this
wise : Out of the indivisible and unchangeable, and also out of that which
is divisible and has to do with material bodies, he compounded a third and
intermediate kind of essence, partaking of the nature of the same and of the
other, and this compound he placed accordingly in a mean between the
indivisible, and the divisible and material. He took the three elements of the
same, the other, and the essence, and mingled them into one form, compressing
by force the reluctant and unsociable nature of the other into the same. When
he had mingled them with the essence and out of three made one, he again
divided this whole into as many portions as was fitting, each portion being a
compound of the same, the other, and the essence. And he proceeded to divide
after this manner : — First of all, he took away one part of the whole
[1], and then he separated a second part which was double the first [2], and
then he took away a third part which was half as much again as the second and
three times as much as the first [3], and then he took a fourth part which was
twice as much as the second [4], and a fifth part which was three times the
third [9], and a sixth part which was eight times the first [8], and a seventh
part which was twenty-seven times the first [27]. After this he filled up the
double intervals [i.e. between 1, 2, 4, 8] and the triple [i.e. between 1, 3,
9, 27] cutting off yet other portions from the mixture and placing them in the
intervals, so that in each interval there were two kinds of means, the one
exceeding and exceeded by equal parts of its extremes [as for example 1, 4/3,
2, in which the mean 4/3 is one-third of 1 more than 1, and one-third of 2 less
than 2], the other being that kind of mean which exceeds and is exceeded by an
equal number. Where there were intervals of 3/2 and of 4/3 and of 9/8, made by
the connecting terms in the former intervals, he filled up all the intervals of
4/3 with the interval of 9/8, leaving a fraction over ; and the interval
which this fraction expressed was in the ratio of 256 to 243. And thus the
whole mixture out of which he cut these portions was all exhausted by him. This
entire compound he divided lengthways into two parts, which he joined to one
another at the centre like the letter X, and bent them into a circular form,
connecting them with themselves and each other at the point opposite to their
original meeting-point ; and, comprehending them in a uniform revolution
upon the same axis, he made the one the outer and the other the inner circle.
Now the motion of the outer circle he called the motion of the same, and the
motion of the inner circle the motion of the other or diverse. The motion of
the same he carried round by the side to the right, and the motion of the
diverse diagonally to the left. And he gave dominion to the motion of the same
and like, for that he left single and undivided ; but the inner motion he
divided in six places and made seven unequal circles having their intervals in
ratios of two and three, three of each, and bade the orbits proceed in a
direction opposite to one another ; and three [Sun, Mercury, Venus] he
made to move with equal swiftness, and the remaining four [Moon, Saturn, Mars,
Jupiter] to move with unequal swiftness to the three and to one another, but in
due proportion.
Now when the
Creator had framed the soul according to his will, he formed within her the
corporeal universe, and brought the two together, and united them centre to
centre. The soul, interfused everywhere from the centre to the circumference of
heaven, of which also she is the external envelopment, herself turning in
herself, began a divine beginning of never ceasing and rational life enduring throughout
all time. The body of heaven is visible, but the soul is invisible, and
partakes of reason and harmony, and being made by the best of intellectual and
everlasting natures, is the best of things created. And because she is composed
of the same and of the other and of the essence, these three, and is divided
and united in due proportion, and in her revolutions returns upon herself, the
soul, when touching anything which has essence, whether dispersed in parts or
undivided, is stirred through all her powers, to declare the sameness or
difference of that thing and some other ; and to what individuals are
related, and by what affected, and in what way and how and when, both in the
world of generation and in the world of immutable being. And when reason, which
works with equal truth, whether she be in the circle of the diverse or of the
same — in voiceless silence holding her onward course in the sphere of the
self-moved — when reason, I say, is hovering around the sensible world and when
the circle of the diverse also moving truly imparts the intimations of sense to
the whole soul, then arise opinions and beliefs sure and certain. But when
reason is concerned with the rational, and the circle of the same moving
smoothly declares it, then intelligence and knowledge are necessarily
perfected. And if any one affirms that in which these two are found to be other
than the soul, he will say the very opposite of the truth.
When the father
creator saw the creature which he had made moving and living, the created image
of the eternal gods, he rejoiced, and in his joy determined to make the copy
still more like the original ; and as this was eternal, he sought to make
the universe eternal, so far as might be. Now the nature of the ideal being was
everlasting, but to bestow this attribute in its fulness upon a creature was
impossible. Wherefore he resolved to have a moving image of eternity, and when
he set in order the heaven, he made this image eternal but moving according to
number, while eternity itself rests in unity ; and this image we call
time. For there were no days and nights and months and years before the heaven
was created, but when he constructed the heaven he created them also. They are
all parts of time, and the past and future are created species of time, which
we unconsciously but wrongly transfer to the eternal essence ; for we say
that he “was,” he “is,” he “will be,” but the truth is that “is” alone is
properly attributed to him, and that “was” and “will be” only to be spoken of
becoming in time, for they are motions, but that which is immovably the same
cannot become older or younger by time, nor ever did or has become, or
hereafter will be, older or younger, nor is subject at all to any of those
states which affect moving and sensible things and of which generation is the
cause. These are the forms of time, which imitates eternity and revolves
according to a law of number. Moreover, when we say that what has become is
become and what becomes is becoming, and that what will become is about to
become and that the non-existent is non-existent — all these are inaccurate
modes of expression. But perhaps this whole subject will be more suitably
discussed on some other occasion.
Time, then, and the
heaven came into being at the same instant in order that, having been created
together, if ever there was to be a dissolution of them, they might be
dissolved together. It was framed after the pattern of the eternal nature, that
it might resemble this as far as was possible ; for the pattern exists
from eternity, and the created heaven has been, and is, and will be, in all
time. Such was the mind and thought of God in the creation of time. The sun and
moon and five other stars, which are called the planets, were created by him in
order to distinguish and preserve the numbers of time ; and when he had
made their several bodies, he placed them in the orbits in which the circle of
the other was revolving — in seven orbits seven stars. First, there was the
moon in the orbit nearest the earth, and next the sun, in the second orbit
above the earth ; then came the morning star and the star sacred to
Hermes, moving in orbits which have an equal swiftness with the sun, but in an
opposite direction ; and this is the reason why the sun and Hermes and
Lucifer overtake and are overtaken by each other. To enumerate the places which
he assigned to the other stars, and to give all the reasons why he assigned
them, although a secondary matter, would give more trouble than the primary.
These things at some future time, when we are at leisure, may have the
consideration which they deserve, but not at present.
Now, when all the
stars which were necessary to the creation of time had attained a motion
suitable to them, — and had become living creatures having bodies fastened by
vital chains, and learnt their appointed task, moving in the motion of the
diverse, which is diagonal, and passes through and is governed by the motion of
the same, they revolved, some in a larger and some in a lesser orbit — those
which had the lesser orbit revolving faster, and those which had the larger
more slowly. Now by reason of the motion of the same, those which revolved
fastest appeared to be overtaken by those which moved slower although they
really overtook them ; for the motion of the same made them all turn in a
spiral, and, because some went one way and some another, that which receded
most slowly from the sphere of the same, which was the swiftest, appeared to
follow it most nearly. That there might be some visible measure of their
relative swiftness and slowness as they proceeded in their eight courses, God
lighted a fire, which we now call the sun, in the second from the earth of
these orbits, that it might give light to the whole of heaven, and that the
animals, as many as nature intended, might participate in number, learning
arithmetic from the revolution of the same and the like. Thus then, and for
this reason the night and the day were created, being the period of the one
most intelligent revolution. And the month is accomplished when the moon has completed
her orbit and overtaken the sun, and the year when the sun has completed his
own orbit. Mankind, with hardly an exception, have not remarked the periods of
the other stars, and they have no name for them, and do not measure them
against one another by the help of number, and hence they can scarcely be said
to know that their wanderings, being infinite in number and admirable for their
variety, make up time. And yet there is no difficulty in seeing that the
perfect number of time fulfils the perfect year when all the eight revolutions,
having their relative degrees of swiftness, are accomplished together and
attain their completion at the same time, measured by the rotation of the same
and equally moving. After this manner, and for these reasons, came into being
such of the stars as in their heavenly progress received reversals of motion,
to the end that the created heaven might imitate the eternal nature, and be as
like as possible to the perfect and intelligible animal.
Thus far and until
the birth of time the created universe was made in the likeness of the
original, but inasmuch as all animals were not yet comprehended therein, it was
still unlike. What remained, the creator then proceeded to fashion after the
nature of the pattern. Now as in the ideal animal the mind perceives ideas or
species of a certain nature and number, he thought that this created animal
ought to have species of a like nature and number. There are four such ;
one of them is the heavenly race of the gods ; another, the race of birds
whose way is in the air ; the third, the watery species ; and the
fourth, the pedestrian and land creatures. Of the heavenly and divine, he
created the greater part out of fire, that they might be the brightest of all
things and fairest to behold, and he fashioned them after the likeness of the
universe in the figure of a circle, and made them follow the intelligent motion
of the supreme, distributing them over the whole circumference of heaven, which
was to be a true cosmos or glorious world spangled with them all over. And he
gave to each of them two movements : the first, a movement on the same
spot after the same manner, whereby they ever continue to think consistently
the same thoughts about the same things ; the second, a forward movement,
in which they are controlled by the revolution of the same and the like ;
but by the other five motions they were unaffected, in order that each of them
might attain the highest perfection. And for this reason the fixed stars were
created, to be divine and eternal animals, ever-abiding and revolving after the
same manner and on the same spot ; and the other stars which reverse their
motion and are subject to deviations of this kind, were created in the manner
already described. The earth, which is our nurse, clinging around the pole
which is extended through the universe, he framed to be the guardian and
artificer of night and day, first and eldest of gods that are in the interior
of heaven. Vain would be the attempt to tell all the figures of them circling
as in dance, and their juxtapositions, and the return of them in their
revolutions upon themselves, and their approximations, and to say which of
these deities in their conjunctions meet, and which of them are in opposition,
and in what order they get behind and before one another, and when they are
severally eclipsed to our sight and again reappear, sending terrors and
intimations of the future to those who cannot calculate their movements — to
attempt to tell of all this without a visible representation of the heavenly
system would be labour in vain. Enough on this head ; and now let what we
have said about the nature of the created and visible gods have an end.
To know or tell the
origin of the other divinities is beyond us, and we must accept the traditions
of the men of old time who affirm themselves to be the offspring of the gods —
that is what they say — and they must surely have known their own ancestors.
How can we doubt the word of the children of the gods ? Although they give
no probable or certain proofs, still, as they declare that they are speaking of
what took place in their own family, we must conform to custom and believe
them. In this manner, then, according to them, the genealogy of these gods is
to be received and set forth.
Oceanus and Tethys
were the children of Earth and Heaven, and from these sprang Phorcys and Cronos
and Rhea, and all that generation ; and from Cronos and Rhea sprang Zeus
and Here, and all those who are said to be their brethren, and others who were
the children of these.
Now, when all of
them, both those who visibly appear in their revolutions as well as those other
gods who are of a more retiring nature, had come into being, the creator of the
universe addressed them in these words : “Gods, children of gods, who are my
works, and of whom I am the artificer and father, my creations are
indissoluble, if so I will. All that is bound may be undone, but only an evil
being would wish to undo that which is harmonious and happy. Wherefore, since
ye are but creatures, ye are not altogether immortal and indissoluble, but ye
shall certainly not be dissolved, nor be liable to the fate of death, having in
my will a greater and mightier bond than those with which ye were bound at the
time of your birth. And now listen to my instructions : — Three tribes of
mortal beings remain to be created — without them the universe will be
incomplete, for it will not contain every kind of animal which it ought to
contain, if it is to be perfect. On the other hand, if they were created by me
and received life at my hands, they would be on an equality with the gods. In
order then that they may be mortal, and that this universe may be truly
universal, do ye, according to your natures, betake yourselves to the formation
of animals, imitating the power which was shown by me in creating you. The part
of them worthy of the name immortal, which is called divine and is the guiding
principle of those who are willing to follow justice and you — of that divine
part I will myself sow the seed, and having made a beginning, I will hand the
work over to you. And do ye then interweave the mortal with the immortal, and
make and beget living creatures, and give them food, and make them to grow, and
receive them again in death.”
Thus he spake, and
once more into the cup in which he had previously mingled the soul of the
universe he poured the remains of the elements, and mingled them in much the
same manner ; they were not, however, pure as before, but diluted to the
second and third degree. And having made it he divided the whole mixture into
souls equal in number to the stars, and assigned each soul to a star ; and
having there placed them as in a chariot, he showed them the nature of the
universe, and declared to them the laws of destiny, according to which their
first birth would be one and the same for all, — no one should suffer a
disadvantage at his hands ; they were to be sown in the instruments of
time severally adapted to them, and to come forth the most religious of
animals ; and as human nature was of two kinds, the superior race would
here after be called man. Now, when they should be implanted in bodies by
necessity, and be always gaining or losing some part of their bodily substance,
then in the first place it would be necessary that they should all have in them
one and the same faculty of sensation, arising out of irresistible
impressions ; in the second place, they must have love, in which pleasure
and pain mingle ; also fear and anger, and the feelings which are akin or
opposite to them ; if they conquered these they would live righteously,
and if they were conquered by them, unrighteously. He who lived well during his
appointed time was to return and dwell in his native star, and there he would
have a blessed and congenial existence. But if he failed in attaining this, at
the second birth he would pass into a woman, and if, when in that state of
being, he did not desist from evil, he would continually be changed into some
brute who resembled him in the evil nature which he had acquired, and would not
cease from his toils and transformations until he followed the revolution of
the same and the like within him, and overcame by the help of reason the
turbulent and irrational mob of later accretions, made up of fire and air and
water and earth, and returned to the form of his first and better state. Having
given all these laws to his creatures, that he might be guiltless of future
evil in any of them, the creator sowed some of them in the earth, and some in
the moon, and some in the other instruments of time ; and when he had sown
them he committed to the younger gods the fashioning of their mortal bodies,
and desired them to furnish what was still lacking to the human soul, and
having made all the suitable additions, to rule over them, and to pilot the
mortal animal in the best and wisest manner which they could, and avert from
him all but self-inflicted evils.
When the creator
had made all these ordinances he remained in his own accustomed nature, and his
children heard and were obedient to their father’s word, and receiving from him
the immortal principle of a mortal creature, in imitation of their own creator
they borrowed portions of fire, and earth, and water, and air from the world,
which were hereafter to be restored — these they took and welded them together,
not with the indissoluble chains by which they were themselves bound, but with
little pegs too small to be visible, making up out of all the four elements
each separate body, and fastening the courses of the immortal soul in a body
which was in a state of perpetual influx and efflux. Now these courses,
detained as in a vast river, neither overcame nor were overcome ; but were
hurrying and hurried to and fro, so that the whole animal was moved and
progressed, irregularly however and irrationally and anyhow, in all the six
directions of motion, wandering backwards and forwards, and right and left, and
up and down, and in all the six directions. For great as was the advancing and
retiring flood which provided nourishment, the affections produced by external
contact caused still greater tumult — when the body of any one met and came
into collision with some external fire, or with the solid earth or the gliding
waters, or was caught in the tempest borne on the air, and the motions produced
by any of these impulses were carried through the body to the soul. All such
motions have consequently received the general name of “sensations,” which they
still retain. And they did in fact at that time create a very great and mighty
movement ; uniting with the ever flowing stream in stirring up and
violently shaking the courses of the soul, they completely stopped the
revolution of the same by their opposing current, and hindered it from
predominating and advancing ; and they so disturbed the nature of the
other or diverse, that the three double intervals [i.e. between 1, 2, 4, 8],
and the three triple intervals [i.e. between 1, 3, 9, 27], together with the
mean terms and connecting links which are expressed by the ratios of 3 : 2, and
4 : 3, and of 9 : 8 — these, although they cannot be wholly undone except by
him who united them, were twisted by them in all sorts of ways, and the circles
were broken and disordered in every possible manner, so that when they moved
they were tumbling to pieces, and moved irrationally, at one time in a reverse
direction, and then again obliquely, and then upside down, as you might imagine
a person who is upside down and has his head leaning upon the ground and his
feet up against something in the air ; and when he is in such a position,
both he and the spectator fancy that the right of either is his left, and left
right. If, when powerfully experiencing these and similar effects, the
revolutions of the soul come in contact with some external thing, either of the
class of the same or of the other, they speak of the same or of the other in a
manner the very opposite of the truth ; and they become false and foolish,
and there is no course or revolution in them which has a guiding or directing
power ; and if again any sensations enter in violently from without and
drag after them the whole vessel of the soul, then the courses of the soul,
though they seem to conquer, are really conquered.
And by reason of
all these affections, the soul, when encased in a mortal body, now, as in the
beginning, is at first without intelligence ; but when the flood of growth
and nutriment abates, and the courses of the soul, calming down, go their own
way and become steadier as time goes on, then the several circles return to
their natural form, and their revolutions are corrected, and they call the same
and the other by their right names, and make the possessor of them to become a
rational being. And if these combine in him with any true nurture or education,
he attains the fulness and health of the perfect man, and escapes the worst
disease of all ; but if he neglects education he walks lame to the end of
his life, and returns imperfect and good for nothing to the world below. This,
however, is a later stage ; at present we must treat more exactly the
subject before us, which involves a preliminary enquiry into the generation of
the body and its members, and as to how the soul was created — for what reason
and by what providence of the gods ; and holding fast to probability, we
must pursue our way.
First, then, the
gods, imitating the spherical shape of the universe, enclosed the two divine
courses in a spherical body, that, namely, which we now term the head, being
the most divine part of us and the lord of all that is in us : to this the
gods, when they put together the body, gave all the other members to be
servants, considering that it partook of every sort of motion. In order then
that it might not tumble about among the high and deep places of the earth, but
might be able to get over the one and out of the other, they provided the body
to be its vehicle and means of locomotion ; which consequently had length
and was furnished with four limbs extended and flexible ; these God
contrived to be instruments of locomotion with which it might take hold and
find support, and so be able to pass through all places, carrying on high the
dwelling-place of the most sacred and divine part of us. Such was the origin of
legs and hands, which for this reason were attached to every man ; and the
gods, deeming the front part of man to be more honourable and more fit to
command than the hinder part, made us to move mostly in a forward direction.
Wherefore man must needs have his front part unlike and distinguished from the
rest of his body.
And so in the
vessel of the head, they first of all put a face in which they inserted organs
to minister in all things to the providence of the soul, and they appointed
this part, which has authority, to be by nature the part which is in front. And
of the organs they first contrived the eyes to give light, and the principle
according to which they were inserted was as follows : So much of fire as
would not burn, but gave a gentle light, they formed into a substance akin to
the light of every-day life ; and the pure fire which is within us and
related thereto they made to flow through the eyes in a stream smooth and
dense, compressing the whole eye, and especially the centre part, so that it
kept out everything of a coarser nature, and allowed to pass only this pure
element. When the light of day surrounds the stream of vision, then like falls
upon like, and they coalesce, and one body is formed by natural affinity in the
line of vision, wherever the light that falls from within meets with an
external object. And the whole stream of vision, being similarly affected in virtue
of similarity, diffuses the motions of what it touches or what touches it over
the whole body, until they reach the soul, causing that perception which we
call sight. But when night comes on and the external and kindred fire departs,
then the stream of vision is cut off ; for going forth to an unlike
element it is changed and extinguished, being no longer of one nature with the
surrounding atmosphere which is now deprived of fire : and so the eye no
longer sees, and we feel disposed to sleep. For when the eyelids, which the
gods invented for the preservation of sight, are closed, they keep in the
internal fire ; and the power of the fire diffuses and equalises the
inward motions ; when they are equalised, there is rest, and when the rest
is profound, sleep comes over us scarce disturbed by dreams ; but where
the greater motions still remain, of whatever nature and in whatever locality,
they engender corresponding visions in dreams, which are remembered by us when
we are awake and in the external world. And now there is no longer any
difficulty in understanding the creation of images in mirrors and all smooth
and bright surfaces. For from the communion of the internal and external fires,
and again from the union of them and their numerous transformations when they
meet in the mirror, all these appearances of necessity arise, when the fire
from the face coalesces with the fire from the eye on the bright and smooth
surface. And right appears left and left right, because the visual rays come
into contact with the rays emitted by the object in a manner contrary to the
usual mode of meeting ; but the right appears right, and the left left,
when the position of one of the two concurring lights is reversed ; and
this happens when the mirror is concave and its smooth surface repels the right
stream of vision to the left side, and the left to the right. Or if the mirror
be turned vertically, then the concavity makes the countenance appear to be all
upside down, and the lower rays are driven upwards and the upper downwards.
All these are to be
reckoned among the second and co-operative causes which God, carrying into
execution the idea of the best as far as possible, uses as his ministers. They
are thought by most men not to be the second, but the prime causes of all things,
because they freeze and heat, and contract and dilate, and the like. But they
are not so, for they are incapable of reason or intellect ; the only being
which can properly have mind is the invisible soul, whereas fire and water, and
earth and air, are all of them visible bodies. The lover of intellect and
knowledge ought to explore causes of intelligent nature first of all, and,
secondly, of those things which, being moved by others, are compelled to move
others. And this is what we too must do. Both kinds of causes should be
acknowledged by us, but a distinction should be made between those which are
endowed with mind and are the workers of things fair and good, and those which
are deprived of intelligence and always produce chance effects without order or
design. Of the second or co-operative causes of sight, which help to give to
the eyes the power which they now possess, enough has been said. I will
therefore now proceed to speak of the higher use and purpose for which God has
given them to us. The sight in my opinion is the source of the greatest benefit
to us, for had we never seen the stars, and the sun, and the heaven, none of
the words which we have spoken about the universe would ever have been uttered.
But now the sight of day and night, and the months and the revolutions of the
years, have created number, and have given us a conception of time, and the
power of enquiring about the nature of the universe ; and from this source
we have derived philosophy, than which no greater good ever was or will be
given by the gods to mortal man. This is the greatest boon of sight : and
of the lesser benefits why should I speak ? even the ordinary man if he
were deprived of them would bewail his loss, but in vain. Thus much let me say
however : God invented and gave us sight to the end that we might behold
the courses of intelligence in the heaven, and apply them to the courses of our
own intelligence which are akin to them, the unperturbed to the
perturbed ; and that we, learning them and partaking of the natural truth
of reason, might imitate the absolutely unerring courses of God and regulate
our own vagaries. The same may be affirmed of speech and hearing : they
have been given by the gods to the same end and for a like reason. For this is
the principal end of speech, whereto it most contributes. Moreover, so much of
music as is adapted to the sound of the voice and to the sense of hearing is
granted to us for the sake of harmony ; and harmony, which has motions
akin to the revolutions of our souls, is not regarded by the intelligent votary
of the Muses as given by them with a view to irrational pleasure, which is
deemed to be the purpose of it in our day, but as meant to correct any discord
which may have arisen in the courses of the soul, and to be our ally in
bringing her into harmony and agreement with herself ; and rhythm too was
given by them for the same reason, on account of the irregular and graceless
ways which prevail among mankind generally, and to help us against them.
Thus far in what we
have been saying, with small exception, the works of intelligence have been set
forth ; and now we must place by the side of them in our discourse the
things which come into being through necessity — for the creation is mixed,
being made up of necessity and mind. Mind, the ruling power, persuaded
necessity to bring the greater part of created things to perfection, and thus
and after this manner in the beginning, when the influence of reason got the
better of necessity, the universe was created. But if a person will truly tell
of the way in which the work was accomplished, he must include the other
influence of the variable cause as well. Wherefore, we must return again and
find another suitable beginning, as about the former matters, so also about
these. To which end we must consider the nature of fire, and water, and air,
and earth, such as they were prior to the creation of the heaven, and what was
happening to them in this previous state ; for no one has as yet explained
the manner of their generation, but we speak of fire and the rest of them,
whatever they mean, as though men knew their natures, and we maintain them to
be the first principles and letters or elements of the whole, when they cannot
reasonably be compared by a man of any sense even to syllables or first
compounds. And let me say thus much : I will not now speak of the first
principle or principles of all things, or by whatever name they are to be
called, for this reason — because it is difficult to set forth my opinion
according to the method of discussion which we are at present employing. Do not
imagine, any more than I can bring myself to imagine, that I should be right in
undertaking so great and difficult a task. Remembering what I said at first
about probability, I will do my best to give as probable an explanation as any
other — or rather, more probable ; and I will first go back to the
beginning and try to speak of each thing and of all. Once more, then, at the
commencement of my discourse, I call upon God, and beg him to be our saviour
out of a strange and unwonted enquiry, and to bring us to the haven of
probability. So now let us begin again.
This new beginning
of our discussion of the universe requires a fuller division than the
former ; for then we made two classes, now a third must be revealed. The
two sufficed for the former discussion : one, which we assumed, was a
pattern intelligible and always the same ; and the second was only the
imitation of the pattern, generated and visible. There is also a third kind
which we did not distinguish at the time, conceiving that the two would be
enough. But now the argument seems to require that we should set forth in words
another kind, which is difficult of explanation and dimly seen. What nature are
we to attribute to this new kind of being ? We reply, that it is the
receptacle, and in a manner the nurse, of all generation. I have spoken the
truth ; but I must express myself in clearer language, and this will be an
arduous task for many reasons, and in particular because I must first raise questions
concerning fire and the other elements, and determine what each of them
is ; for to say, with any probability or certitude, which of them should
be called water rather than fire, and which should be called any of them rather
than all or some one of them, is a difficult matter. How, then, shall we settle
this point, and what questions about the elements may be fairly raised ?
In the first place,
we see that what we just now called water, by condensation, I suppose, becomes
stone and earth ; and this same element, when melted and dispersed, passes
into vapour and air. Air, again, when inflamed, becomes fire ; and again
fire, when condensed and extinguished, passes once more into the form of
air ; and once more, air, when collected and condensed, produces cloud and
mist ; and from these, when still more compressed, comes flowing water,
and from water comes earth and stones once more ; and thus generation
appears to be transmitted from one to the other in a circle. Thus, then, as the
several elements never present themselves in the same form, how can any one
have the assurance to assert positively that any of them, whatever it may be,
is one thing rather than another ? No one can. But much the safest plan is
to speak of them as follows : — Anything which we see to be continually
changing, as, for example, fire, we must not call “this” or “that,” but rather
say that it is “of such a nature” ; nor let us speak of water as
“this” ; but always as “such” ; nor must we imply that there is any
stability in any of those things which we indicate by the use of the words
“this” and “that,” supposing ourselves to signify something thereby ; for
they are too volatile to be detained in any such expressions as “this,” or
“that,” or “relative to this,” or any other mode of speaking which represents
them as permanent. We ought not to apply “this” to any of them, but rather the
word “such” ; which expresses the similar principle circulating in each
and all of them ; for example, that should be called “fire” which is of such
a nature always, and so of everything that has generation. That in which the
elements severally grow up, and appear, and decay, is alone to be called by the
name “this” or “that” ; but that which is of a certain nature, hot or
white, or anything which admits of opposite equalities, and all things that are
compounded of them, ought not to be so denominated. Let me make another attempt
to explain my meaning more clearly. Suppose a person to make all kinds of
figures of gold and to be always transmuting one form into all the rest —
somebody points to one of them and asks what it is. By far the safest and
truest answer is, That is gold ; and not to call the triangle or any other
figures which are formed in the gold “these,” as though they had existence,
since they are in process of change while he is making the assertion ; but
if the questioner be willing to take the safe and indefinite expression,
“such,” we should be satisfied. And the same argument applies to the universal
nature which receives all bodies — that must be always called the same ;
for, while receiving all things, she never departs at all from her own nature,
and never in any way, or at any time, assumes a form like that of any of the
things which enter into her ; she is the natural recipient of all impressions,
and is stirred and informed by them, and appears different from time to time by
reason of them. But the forms which enter into and go out of her are the
likenesses of real existences modelled after their patterns in wonderful and
inexplicable manner, which we will hereafter investigate. For the present we
have only to conceive of three natures : first, that which is in process
of generation ; secondly, that in which the generation takes place ;
and thirdly, that of which the thing generated is a resemblance. And we may
liken the receiving principle to a mother, and the source or spring to a
father, and the intermediate nature to a child ; and may remark further,
that if the model is to take every variety of form, then the matter in which
the model is fashioned will not be duly prepared, unless it is formless, and
free from the impress of any of these shapes which it is hereafter to receive
from without. For if the matter were like any of the supervening forms, then
whenever any opposite or entirely different nature was stamped upon its
surface, it would take the impression badly, because it would intrude its own
shape. Wherefore, that which is to receive all forms should have no form ;
as in making perfumes they first contrive that the liquid substance which is to
receive the scent shall be as inodorous as possible ; or as those who wish
to impress figures on soft substances do not allow any previous impression to
remain, but begin by making the surface as even and smooth as possible. In the
same way that which is to receive perpetually and through its whole extent the
resemblances of all eternal beings ought to be devoid of any particular form.
Wherefore, the mother and receptacle of all created and visible and in any way
sensible things, is not to be termed earth, or air, or fire, or water, or any
of their compounds or any of the elements from which these are derived, but is
an invisible and formless being which receives all things and in some
mysterious way partakes of the intelligible, and is most incomprehensible. In
saying this we shall not be far wrong ; as far, however, as we can attain
to a knowledge of her from the previous considerations, we may truly say that
fire is that part of her nature which from time to time is inflamed, and water
that which is moistened, and that the mother substance becomes earth and air,
in so far as she receives the impressions of them.
Let us consider
this question more precisely. Is there any self-existent fire ? and do all
those things which we call self-existent exist ? or are only those things
which we see, or in some way perceive through the bodily organs, truly
existent, and nothing whatever besides them ? And is all that which, we
call an intelligible essence nothing at all, and only a name ? Here is a
question which we must not leave unexamined or undetermined, nor must we affirm
too confidently that there can be no decision ; neither must we
interpolate in our present long discourse a digression equally long, but if it
is possible to set forth a great principle in a few words, that is just what we
want.
Thus I state my
view : — If mind and true opinion are two distinct classes, then I say
that there certainly are these self-existent ideas unperceived by sense, and
apprehended only by the mind ; if, however, as some say, true opinion
differs in no respect from mind, then everything that we perceive through the
body is to be regarded as most real and certain. But we must affirm that to be
distinct, for they have a distinct origin and are of a different nature ;
the one is implanted in us by instruction, the other by persuasion ; the
one is always accompanied by true reason, the other is without reason ;
the one cannot be overcome by persuasion, but the other can : and lastly,
every man may be said to share in true opinion, but mind is the attribute of
the gods and of very few men. Wherefore also we must acknowledge that there is
one kind of being which is always the same, uncreated and indestructible, never
receiving anything into itself from without, nor itself going out to any other,
but invisible and imperceptible by any sense, and of which the contemplation is
granted to intelligence only. And there is another nature of the same name with
it, and like to it, perceived by sense, created, always in motion, becoming in
place and again vanishing out of place, which is apprehended by opinion and
sense. And there is a third nature, which is space, and is eternal, and admits
not of destruction and provides a home for all created things, and is
apprehended without the help of sense, by a kind of spurious reason, and is
hardly real ; which we beholding as in a dream, say of all existence that
it must of necessity be in some place and occupy a space, but that what is
neither in heaven nor in earth has no existence. Of these and other things of
the same kind, relating to the true and waking reality of nature, we have only
this dreamlike sense, and we are unable to cast off sleep and determine the
truth about them. For an image, since the reality, after which it is modelled,
does not belong to it, and it exists ever as the fleeting shadow of some other,
must be inferred to be in another [i.e. in space ], grasping existence in some
way or other, or it could not be at all. But true and exact reason, vindicating
the nature of true being, maintains that while two things [i.e. the image and
space] are different they cannot exist one of them in the other and so be one
and also two at the same time.
Thus have I
concisely given the result of my thoughts ; and my verdict is that being
and space and generation, these three, existed in their three ways before the
heaven ; and that the nurse of generation, moistened by water and inflamed
by fire, and receiving the forms of earth and air, and experiencing all the
affections which accompany these, presented a strange variety of
appearances ; and being full of powers which were neither similar nor
equally balanced, was never in any part in a state of equipoise, but swaying
unevenly hither and thither, was shaken by them, and by its motion again shook
them ; and the elements when moved were separated and carried continually,
some one way, some another ; as, when rain is shaken and winnowed by fans
and other instruments used in the threshing of corn, the close and heavy
particles are borne away and settle in one direction, and the loose and light
particles in another. In this manner, the four kinds or elements were then
shaken by the receiving vessel, which, moving like a winnowing machine,
scattered far away from one another the elements most unlike, and forced the
most similar elements into dose contact. Wherefore also the various elements
had different places before they were arranged so as to form the universe. At
first, they were all without reason and measure. But when the world began to
get into order, fire and water and earth and air had only certain faint traces
of themselves, and were altogether such as everything might be expected to be
in the absence of God ; this, I say, was their nature at that time, and
God fashioned them by form and number. Let it be consistently maintained by us
in all that we say that God made them as far as possible the fairest and best,
out of things which were not fair and good. And now I will endeavour to show
you the disposition and generation of them by an unaccustomed argument, which
am compelled to use ; but I believe that you will be able to follow me,
for your education has made you familiar with the methods of science.
In the first place,
then, as is evident to all, fire and earth and water and air are bodies. And
every sort of body possesses solidity, and every solid must necessarily be
contained in planes ; and every plane rectilinear figure is composed of
triangles ; and all triangles are originally of two kinds, both of which
are made up of one right and two acute angles ; one of them has at either
end of the base the half of a divided right angle, having equal sides, while in
the other the right angle is divided into unequal parts, having unequal sides.
These, then, proceeding by a combination of probability with demonstration, we
assume to be the original elements of fire and the other bodies ; but the
principles which are prior to these God only knows, and he of men who is the
friend God. And next we have to determine what are the four most beautiful
bodies which are unlike one another, and of which some are capable of
resolution into one another ; for having discovered thus much, we shall
know the true origin of earth and fire and of the proportionate and
intermediate elements. And then we shall not be willing to allow that there are
any distinct kinds of visible bodies fairer than these. Wherefore we must
endeavour to construct the four forms of bodies which excel in beauty, and then
we shall be able to say that we have sufficiently apprehended their nature. Now
of the two triangles, the isosceles has one form only ; the scalene or
unequal-sided has an infinite number. Of the infinite forms we must select the
most beautiful, if we are to proceed in due order, and any one who can point
out a more beautiful form than ours for the construction of these bodies, shall
carry off the palm, not as an enemy, but as a friend. Now, the one which we
maintain to be the most beautiful of all the many triangles (and we need not
speak of the others) is that of which the double forms a third triangle which
is equilateral ; the reason of this would be long to tell ; he who
disproves what we are saying, and shows that we are mistaken, may claim a
friendly victory. Then let us choose two triangles, out of which fire and the
other elements have been constructed, one isosceles, the other having the
square of the longer side equal to three times the square of the lesser side.
Now is the time to
explain what was before obscurely said : there was an error in imagining
that all the four elements might be generated by and into one another ;
this, I say, was an erroneous supposition, for there are generated from the
triangles which we have selected four kinds — three from the one which has the
sides unequal ; the fourth alone is framed out of the isosceles triangle.
Hence they cannot all be resolved into one another, a great number of small
bodies being combined into a few large ones, or the converse. But three of them
can be thus resolved and compounded, for they all spring from one, and when the
greater bodies are broken up, many small bodies will spring up out of them and
take their own proper figures ; or, again, when many small bodies are
dissolved into their triangles, if they become one, they will form one large
mass of another kind. So much for their passage into one another. I have now to
speak of their several kinds, and show out of what combinations of numbers each
of them was formed. The first will be the simplest and smallest construction,
and its element is that triangle which has its hypotenuse twice the lesser
side. When two such triangles are joined at the diagonal, and this is repeated
three times, and the triangles rest their diagonals and shorter sides on the
same point as a centre, a single equilateral triangle is formed out of six
triangles ; and four equilateral triangles, if put together, make out of
every three plane angles one solid angle, being that which is nearest to the
most obtuse of plane angles ; and out of the combination of these four
angles arises the first solid form which distributes into equal and similar
parts the whole circle in which it is inscribed. The second species of solid is
formed out of the same triangles, which unite as eight equilateral triangles
and form one solid angle out of four plane angles, and out of six such angles
the second body is completed. And the third body is made up of 120 triangular
elements, forming twelve solid angles, each of them included in five plane
equilateral triangles, having altogether twenty bases, each of which is an
equilateral triangle. The one element [that is, the triangle which has its
hypotenuse twice the lesser side] having generated these figures, generated no
more ; but the isosceles triangle produced the fourth elementary figure,
which is compounded of four such triangles, joining their right angles in a
centre, and forming one equilateral quadrangle. Six of these united form eight
solid angles, each of which is made by the combination of three plane right angles ;
the figure of the body thus composed is a cube, having six plane quadrangular
equilateral bases. There was yet a fifth combination which God used in the
delineation of the universe.
Now, he who, duly
reflecting on all this, enquires whether the worlds are to be regarded as
indefinite or definite in number, will be of opinion that the notion of their
indefiniteness is characteristic of a sadly indefinite and ignorant mind. He,
however, who raises the question whether they are to be truly regarded as one
or five, takes up a more reasonable position. Arguing from probabilities, I am
of opinion that they are one ; another, regarding the question from
another point of view, will be of another mind. But, leaving this enquiry, let
us proceed to distribute the elementary forms, which have now been created in
idea, among the four elements.
To earth, then, let
us assign the cubical form ; for earth is the most immoveable of the four
and the most plastic of all bodies, and that which has the most stable bases must
of necessity be of such a nature. Now, of the triangles which we assumed at
first, that which has two equal sides is by nature more firmly based than that
which has unequal sides ; and of the compound figures which are formed out
of either, the plane equilateral quadrangle has necessarily, a more stable
basis than the equilateral triangle, both in the whole and in the parts.
Wherefore, in assigning this figure to earth, we adhere to probability ;
and to water we assign that one of the remaining forms which is the least
moveable ; and the most moveable of them to fire ; and to air that
which is intermediate. Also we assign the smallest body to fire, and the
greatest to water, and the intermediate in size to air ; and, again, the
acutest body to fire, and the next in acuteness to, air, and the third to
water. Of all these elements, that which has the fewest bases must necessarily
be the most moveable, for it must be the acutest and most penetrating in every
way, and also the lightest as being composed of the smallest number of similar
particles : and the second body has similar properties in a second degree,
and the third body in the third degree. Let it be agreed, then, both according
to strict reason and according to probability, that the pyramid is the solid
which is the original element and seed of fire ; and let us assign the
element which was next in the order of generation to air, and the third to
water. We must imagine all these to be so small that no single particle of any
of the four kinds is seen by us on account of their smallness : but when
many of them are collected together their aggregates are seen. And the ratios
of their numbers, motions, and other properties, everywhere God, as far as
necessity allowed or gave consent, has exactly perfected, and harmonised in due
proportion.
From all that we
have just been saying about the elements or kinds, the most probable conclusion
is as follows : — earth, when meeting with fire and dissolved by its
sharpness, whether the dissolution take place in the fire itself or perhaps in
some mass of air or water, is borne hither and thither, until its parts,
meeting together and mutually harmonising, again become earth ; for they
can never take any other form. But water, when divided by fire or by air, on
reforming, may become one part fire and two parts air ; and a single
volume of air divided becomes two of fire. Again, when a small body of fire is
contained in a larger body of air or water or earth, and both are moving, and
the fire struggling is overcome and broken up, then two volumes of fire form
one volume of air ; and when air is overcome and cut up into small pieces,
two and a half parts of air are condensed into one part of water. Let us
consider the matter in another way. When one of the other elements is fastened
upon by fire, and is cut by the sharpness of its angles and sides, it coalesces
with the fire, and then ceases to be cut by them any longer. For no element
which is one and the same with itself can be changed by or change another of
the same kind and in the same state. But so long as in the process of
transition the weaker is fighting against the stronger, the dissolution
continues. Again, when a few small particles, enclosed in many larger ones, are
in process of decomposition and extinction, they only cease from their tendency
to extinction when they consent to pass into the conquering nature, and fire
becomes air and air water. But if bodies of another kind go and attack them
[i.e. the small particles], the latter continue to be dissolved until, being
completely forced back and dispersed, they make their escape to their own
kindred, or else, being overcome and assimilated to the conquering power, they
remain where they are and dwell with their victors, and from being many become
one. And owing to these affections, all things are changing their place, for by
the motion of the receiving vessel the bulk of each class is distributed into
its proper place ; but those things which become unlike themselves and
like other things, are hurried by the shaking into the place of the things to
which they grow like.
Now all unmixed and
primary bodies are produced by such causes as these. As to the subordinate
species which are included in the greater kinds, they are to be attributed to
the varieties in the structure of the two original triangles. For either
structure did not originally produce the triangle of one size only, but some
larger and some smaller, and there are as many sizes as there are species of
the four elements. Hence when they are mingled with themselves and with one
another there is an endless variety of them, which those who would arrive at
the probable truth of nature ought duly to consider.
Unless a person
comes to an understanding about the nature and conditions of rest and motion,
he will meet with many difficulties in the discussion which follows. Something
has been said of this matter already, and something more remains to be said,
which is, that motion never exists in what is uniform. For to conceive that
anything can be moved without a mover is hard or indeed impossible, and equally
impossible to conceive that there can be a mover unless there be something
which can be moved — motion cannot exist where either of these are wanting, and
for these to be uniform is impossible ; wherefore we must assign rest to
uniformity and motion to the want of uniformity. Now inequality is the cause of
the nature which is wanting in uniformity ; and of this we have already
described the origin. But there still remains the further point — why things
when divided after their kinds do not cease to pass through one another and to
change their place — which we will now proceed to explain. In the revolution of
the universe are comprehended all the four elements, and this being circular
and having a tendency to come together, compresses everything and will not
allow any place to be left void. Wherefore, also, fire above all things
penetrates everywhere, and air next, as being next in rarity of the
elements ; and the two other elements in like manner penetrate according to
their degrees of rarity. For those things which are composed of the largest
particles have the largest void left in their compositions, and those which are
composed of the smallest particles have the least. And the contraction caused
by the compression thrusts the smaller particles into the interstices of the
larger. And thus, when the small parts are placed side by side with the larger,
and the lesser divide the greater and the greater unite the lesser, all the
elements are borne up and down and hither and thither towards their own
places ; for the change in the size of each changes its position in space.
And these causes generate an inequality which is always maintained, and is
continually creating a perpetual motion of the elements in all time.
In the next place
we have to consider that there are divers kinds of fire. There are, for
example, first, flame ; and secondly, those emanations of flame which do
not burn but only give light to the eyes ; thirdly, the remains of fire,
which are seen in red-hot embers after the flame has been extinguished. There
are similar differences in the air ; of which the brightest part is called
the aether, and the most turbid sort mist and darkness ; and there are
various other nameless kinds which arise from the inequality of the triangles.
Water, again, admits in the first place of a division into two kinds ; the
one liquid and the other fusile. The liquid kind is composed of the small and
unequal particles of water ; and moves itself and is moved by other bodies
owing to the want of uniformity and the shape of its particles ; whereas
the fusile kind, being formed of large and uniform particles, is more stable
than the other, and is heavy and compact by reason of its uniformity. But when
fire gets in and dissolves the particles and destroys the uniformity, it has
greater mobility, and becoming fluid is thrust forth by the neighbouring air
and spreads upon the earth ; and this dissolution of the solid masses is
called melting, and their spreading out upon the earth flowing. Again, when the
fire goes out of the fusile substance, it does not pass into vacuum, but into
the neighbouring air ; and the air which is displaced forces together the
liquid and still moveable mass into the place which was occupied by the fire,
and unites it with itself. Thus compressed the mass resumes its equability, and
is again at unity with itself, because the fire which was the author of the
inequality has retreated ; and this departure of the fire is called
cooling, and the coming together which follows upon it is termed congealment.
Of all the kinds termed fusile, that which is the densest and is formed out of
the finest and most uniform parts is that most precious possession called gold,
which is hardened by filtration through rock ; this is unique in kind, and
has both a glittering and a yellow colour. A shoot of gold, which is so dense
as to be very hard, and takes a black colour, is termed adamant. There is also
another kind which has parts nearly like gold, and of which there are several
species ; it is denser than gold, and it contains a small and fine portion
of earth, and is therefore harder, yet also lighter because of the great
interstices which it has within itself ; and this substance, which is one
of the bright and denser kinds of water, when solidified is called copper.
There is an alloy of earth mingled with it, which, when the two parts grow old
and are disunited, shows itself separately and is called rust. The remaining
phenomena of the same kind there will be no difficulty in reasoning out by the
method of probabilities. A man may sometimes set aside meditations about
eternal things, and for recreation turn to consider the truths of generation
which are probable only ; he will thus gain a pleasure not to be repented
of, and secure for himself while he lives a wise and moderate pastime. Let us
grant ourselves this indulgence, and go through the probabilities relating to
the same subjects which follow next in order.
Water which is
mingled with fire, so much as is fine and liquid (being so called by reason of
its motion and the way in which it rolls along the ground), and soft, because
its bases give way are less stable than those of earth, when separated from
fire and air and isolated, becomes more uniform, and by their retirement is
compressed into itself ; and if the condensation be very great, the water
above the earth becomes hail, but on the earth, ice ; and that which is
congealed in a less degree and is only half solid, when above the earth is
called snow, and when upon the earth, and condensed from dew, hoarfrost. Then,
again, there are the numerous kinds of water which have been mingled with one
another, and are distilled through plants which grow in the earth ; and
this whole class is called by the name of juices or saps. The unequal admixture
of these fluids creates a variety of species ; most of them are nameless,
but four which are of a fiery nature are clearly distinguished and have names.
First there is wine, which warms the soul as well as the body : secondly,
there is the oily nature, which is smooth and divides the visual ray, and for
this reason is bright and shining and of a glistening appearance, including
pitch, the juice of the castor berry, oil itself, and other things of a like
kind : thirdly, there is the class of substances which expand the
contracted parts of the mouth, until they return to their natural state, and by
reason of this property create sweetness ; — these are included under the
general name of honey : and, lastly, there is a frothy nature, which
differs from all juices, having a burning quality which dissolves the
flesh ; it is called opos (a vegetable acid).
As to the kinds of
earth, that which is filtered through water passes into stone in the following
manner : — The water which mixes with the earth and is broken up in the
process changes into air, and taking this form mounts into its own place. But
as there is no surrounding vacuum it thrusts away the neighbouring air, and
this being rendered heavy, and, when it is displaced, having been poured around
the mass of earth, forcibly compresses it and drives it into the vacant space
whence the new air had come up ; and the earth when compressed by the air
into an indissoluble union with water becomes rock. The fairer sort is that
which is made up of equal and similar parts and is transparent ; that
which has the opposite qualities is inferior. But when all the watery part is
suddenly drawn out by fire, a more brittle substance is formed, to which we
give the name of pottery. Sometimes also moisture may remain, and the earth
which has been fused by fire becomes, when cool, a certain stone of a black
colour. A like separation of the water which had been copiously mingled with
them may occur in two substances composed of finer particles of earth and of a
briny nature ; out of either of them a half solid body is then formed,
soluble in water — the one, soda, which is used for purging away oil and earth,
and other, salt, which harmonizes so well in combinations pleasing to the
palate, and is, as the law testifies, a substance dear to the gods. The
compounds of earth and water are not soluble by water, but by fire only, and
for this reason : — Neither fire nor air melt masses of earth ; for
their particles, being smaller than the interstices in its structure, have plenty
of room to move without forcing their way, and so they leave the earth unmelted
and undissolved ; but particles of water, which are larger, force a
passage, and dissolve and melt the earth. Wherefore earth when not consolidated
by force is dissolved by water only ; when consolidated, by nothing but
fire ; for this is the only body which can find an entrance. The cohesion
of water again, when very strong, is dissolved by fire only — when weaker, then
either by air or fire — the former entering the interstices, and the latter
penetrating even the triangles. But nothing can dissolve air, when strongly
condensed, which does not reach the elements or triangles ; or if not
strongly condensed, then only fire can dissolve it. As to bodies composed of
earth and water, while the water occupies the vacant interstices of the earth
in them which are compressed by force, the particles of water which approach
them from without, finding no entrance, flow around the entire mass and leave
it undissolved ; but the particles of fire, entering into the interstices
of the water, do to the water what water does to earth and fire to air, and are
the sole causes of the compound body of earth and water liquefying and becoming
fluid. Now these bodies are of two kinds ; some of them, such as glass and
the fusible sort of stones, have less water than they have earth ; on the
other hand, substances of the nature of wax and incense have more of water
entering into their composition.
I have thus shown
the various classes of bodies as they are diversified by their forms and
combinations and changes into one another, and now I must endeavour to set
forth their affections and the causes of them. In the first place, the bodies
which I have been describing are necessarily objects of sense. But we have not
yet considered the origin of flesh, or what belongs to flesh, or of that part
of the soul which is mortal. And these things cannot be adequately explained
without also explaining the affections which are concerned with sensation, nor
the latter without the former : and yet to explain them together is hardly
possible ; for which reason we must assume first one or the other and
afterwards examine the nature of our hypothesis. In order, then, that the
affections may follow regularly after the elements, let us presuppose the
existence of body and soul.
First, let us
enquire what we mean by saying that fire is hot ; and about this we may
reason from the dividing or cutting power which it exercises on our bodies. We
all of us feel that fire is sharp ; and we may further consider the
fineness of the sides, and the sharpness of the angles, and the smallness of
the particles, and the swiftness of the motion — all this makes the action of
fire violent and sharp, so that it cuts whatever it meets. And we must not
forget that the original figure of fire [i.e. the pyramid], more than any other
form, has a dividing power which cuts our bodies into small pieces
(Kepmatizei), and thus naturally produces that affection which we call
heat ; and hence the origin of the name (thepmos, Kepma). Now, the
opposite of this is sufficiently manifest ; nevertheless we will not fail
to describe it. For the larger particles of moisture which surround the body,
entering in and driving out the lesser, but not being able to take their
places, compress the moist principle in us ; and this from being unequal
and disturbed, is forced by them into a state of rest, which is due to
equability and compression. But things which are contracted contrary to nature
are by nature at war, and force themselves apart ; and to this war and
convulsion the name of shivering and trembling is given ; and the whole
affection and the cause of the affection are both termed cold. That is called
hard to which our flesh yields, and soft which yields to our flesh ; and
things are also termed hard and soft relatively to one another. That which
yields has a small base ; but that which rests on quadrangular bases is
firmly posed and belongs to the class which offers the greatest
resistance ; so too does that which is the most compact and therefore most
repellent. The nature of the light and the heavy will be best understood when
examined in connexion with our notions of above and below ; for it is
quite a mistake to suppose that the universe is parted into two regions,
separate from and opposite to each other, the one a lower to which all things
tend which have any bulk, and an upper to which things only ascend against
their will. For as the universe is in the form of a sphere, all the
extremities, being equidistant from the centre, are equally extremities, and
the centre, which is equidistant from them, is equally to be regarded as the
opposite of them all. Such being the nature of the world, when a person says
that any of these points is above or below, may he not be justly charged with
using an improper expression ? For the centre of the world cannot be
rightly called either above or below, but is the centre and nothing else ;
and the circumference is not the centre, and has in no one part of itself a different
relation to the centre from what it has in any of the opposite parts. Indeed,
when it is in every direction similar, how can one rightly give to it names
which imply opposition ? For if there were any solid body in equipoise at
the centre of the universe, there would be nothing to draw it to this extreme
rather than to that, for they are all perfectly similar ; and if a person
were to go round the world in a circle, he would often, when standing at the
antipodes of his former position, speak of the same point as above and
below ; for, as I was saying just now, to speak of the whole which is in
the form of a globe as having one part above and another below is not like a
sensible man.
The reason why
these names are used, and the circumstances under which they are ordinarily
applied by us to the division of the heavens, may be elucidated by the
following supposition : — if a person were to stand in that part of the
universe which is the appointed place of fire, and where there is the great
mass of fire to which fiery bodies gather — if, I say, he were to ascend
thither, and, having the power to do this, were to abstract particles of fire
and put them in scales and weigh them, and then, raising the balance, were to
draw the fire by force towards the uncongenial element of the air, it would be
very evident that he could compel the smaller mass more readily than the
larger ; for when two things are simultaneously raised by one and the same
power, the smaller body must necessarily yield to the superior power with less
reluctance than the larger ; and the larger body is called heavy and said
to tend downwards, and the smaller body is called light and said to tend
upwards. And we may detect ourselves who are upon the earth doing precisely the
same thing. For we of separate earthy natures, and sometimes earth itself, and
draw them into the uncongenial element of air by force and contrary to nature,
both clinging to their kindred elements. But that which is smaller yields to
the impulse given by us towards the dissimilar element more easily than the
larger ; and so we call the former light, and the place towards which it
is impelled we call above, and the contrary state and place we call heavy and
below respectively. Now the relations of these must necessarily vary, because
the principal masses of the different elements hold opposite positions ;
for that which is light, heavy, below or above in one place will be found to be
and become contrary and transverse and every way diverse in relation to that
which is light, heavy, below or above in an opposite place. And about all of
them this has to be considered : — that the tendency of each towards its
kindred element makes the body which is moved heavy, and the place towards
which the motion tends below, but things which have an opposite tendency we
call by an opposite name. Such are the causes which we assign to these
phenomena. As to the smooth and the rough, any one who sees them can explain
the reason of them to another. For roughness is hardness mingled with
irregularity, and smoothness is produced by the joint effect of uniformity and
density.
The most important
of the affections which concern the whole body remains to be considered — that
is, the cause of pleasure and pain in the perceptions of which I have been
speaking, and in all other things which are perceived by sense through the
parts of the body, and have both pains and pleasures attendant on them. Let us
imagine the causes of every affection, whether of sense or not, to be of the
following nature, remembering that we have already distinguished between the
nature which is easy and which is hard to move ; for this is the direction
in which we must hunt the prey which we mean to take. A body which is of a
nature to be easily moved, on receiving an impression however slight, spreads
abroad the motion in a circle, the parts communicating with each other, until
at last, reaching the principle of mind, they announce the quality of the
agent. But a body of the opposite kind, being immobile, and not extending to
the surrounding region, merely receives the impression, and does not stir any
of the neighbouring parts ; and since the parts do not distribute the
original impression to other parts, it has no effect of motion on the whole
animal, and therefore produces no effect on the patient. This is true of the
bones and hair and other more earthy parts of the human body ; whereas
what was said above relates mainly to sight and hearing, because they have in
them the greatest amount of fire and air. Now we must conceive of pleasure and
pain in this way. An impression produced in us contrary to nature and violent,
if sudden, is painful ; and, again, the sudden return to nature is
pleasant ; but a gentle and gradual return is imperceptible and vice
versa. On the other hand the impression of sense which is most easily produced
is most readily felt, but is not accompanied by Pleasure or pain ; such,
for example, are the affections of the sight, which, as we said above, is a
body naturally uniting with our body in the day-time ; for cuttings and burnings
and other affections which happen to the sight do not give pain, nor is there
pleasure when the sight returns to its natural state ; but the sensations
are dearest and strongest according to the manner in which the eye is affected
by the object, and itself strikes and touches it ; there is no violence
either in the contraction or dilation of the eye. But bodies formed of larger
particles yield to the agent only with a struggle ; and then they impart
their motions to the whole and cause pleasure and pain — pain when alienated
from their natural conditions, and pleasure when restored to them. Things which
experience gradual withdrawings and emptyings of their nature, and great and
sudden replenishments, fail to perceive the emptying, but are sensible of the
replenishment ; and so they occasion no pain, but the greatest pleasure,
to the mortal part of the soul, as is manifest in the case of perfumes. But
things which are changed all of a sudden, and only gradually and with
difficulty return to their own nature, have effects in every way opposite to
the former, as is evident in the case of burnings and cuttings of the body.
Thus have we
discussed the general affections of the whole body, and the names of the agents
which produce them. And now I will endeavour to speak of the affections of
particular parts, and the causes and agents of them, as far as I am able. In
the first place let us set forth what was omitted when we were speaking of
juices, concerning the affections peculiar to the tongue. These too, like most
of the other affections, appear to be caused by certain contractions and
dilations, but they have besides more of roughness and smoothness than is found
in other affections ; for whenever earthy particles enter into the small
veins which are the testing of the tongue, reaching to the heart, and fall upon
the moist, delicate portions of flesh — when, as they are dissolved, they
contract and dry up the little veins, they are astringent if they are rougher,
but if not so rough, then only harsh. Those of them which are of an abstergent
nature, and purge the whole surface of the tongue, if they do it in excess, and
so encroach as to consume some part of the flesh itself, like potash and soda,
are all termed bitter. But the particles which are deficient in the alkaline
quality, and which cleanse only moderately, are called salt, and having no
bitterness or roughness, are regarded as rather agreeable than otherwise.
Bodies which share in and are made smooth by the heat of the mouth, and which
are inflamed, and again in turn inflame that which heats them, and which are so
light that they are carried upwards to the sensations of the head, and cut all
that comes in their way, by reason of these qualities in them, are all termed
pungent. But when these same particles, refined by putrefaction, enter into the
narrow veins, and are duly proportioned to the particles of earth and air which
are there, they set them whirling about one another, and while they are in a
whirl cause them to dash against and enter into one another, and so form
hollows surrounding the particles that enter — which watery vessels of air (for
a film of moisture, sometimes earthy, sometimes pure, is spread around the air)
are hollow spheres of water ; and those of them which are pure, are transparent,
and are called bubbles, while those composed of the earthy liquid, which is in
a state of general agitation and effervescence, are said to boil or ferment —
of all these affections the cause is termed acid. And there is the opposite
affection arising from an opposite cause, when the mass of entering particles,
immersed in the moisture of the mouth, is congenial to the tongue, and smooths
and oils over the roughness, and relaxes the parts which are unnaturally
contracted, and contracts the parts which are relaxed, and disposes them all
according to their nature — that sort of remedy of violent affections is
pleasant and agreeable to every man, and has the name sweet. But enough of
this.
The faculty of
smell does not admit of differences of kind ; for all smells are of a half
formed nature, and no element is so proportioned as to have any smell. The
veins about the nose are too narrow to admit earth and water, and too wide to
detain fire and air ; and for this reason no one ever perceives the smell of
any of them ; but smells always proceed from bodies that are damp, or
putrefying, or liquefying, or evaporating, and are perceptible only in the
intermediate state, when water is changing into air and air into water ;
and all of them are either vapor or mist. That which is passing out of air into
water is mist, and that which is passing from water into air is vapour ;
and hence all smells are thinner than water and thicker than air. The proof of
this is, that when there is any obstruction to the respiration, and a man draws
in his breath by force, then no smell filters through, but the air without the
smell alone penetrates. Wherefore the varieties of smell have no name, and they
have not many, or definite and simple kinds ; but they are distinguished
only painful and pleasant, the one sort irritating and disturbing the whole
cavity which is situated between the head and the navel, the other having a
soothing influence, and restoring this same region to an agreeable and natural
condition.
In considering the
third kind of sense, hearing, we must speak of the causes in which it
originates. We may in general assume sound to be a blow which passes through
the ears, and is transmitted by means of the air, the brain, and the blood, to
the soul, and that hearing is the vibration of this blow, which begins in the
head and ends in the region of the liver. The sound which moves swiftly is
acute, and the sound which moves slowly is grave, and that which is regular is
equable and smooth, and the reverse is harsh. A great body of sound is loud,
and a small body of sound the reverse. Respecting the harmonies of sound I must
hereafter speak.
There is a fourth
class of sensible things, having many intricate varieties, which must now be
distinguished. They are called by the general name of colours, and are a flame
which emanates from every sort of body, and has particles corresponding to the
sense of sight. I have spoken already, in what has preceded, of the causes
which generate sight, and in this place it will be natural and suitable to give
a rational theory of colours.
Of the particles
coming from other bodies which fall upon the sight, some are smaller and some
are larger, and some are equal to the parts of the sight itself. Those which
are equal are imperceptible, and we call them transparent. The larger produce
contraction, the smaller dilation, in the sight, exercising a power akin to
that of hot and cold bodies on the flesh, or of astringent bodies on the
tongue, or of those heating bodies which we termed pungent. White and black are
similar effects of contraction and dilation in another sphere, and for this
reason have a different appearance. Wherefore, we ought to term white that
which dilates the visual ray, and the opposite of this is black. There is also
a swifter motion of a different sort of fire which strikes and dilates the ray
of sight until it reaches the eyes, forcing a way through their passages and
melting them, and eliciting from them a union of fire and water which we call
tears, being itself an opposite fire which comes to them from an opposite
direction — the inner fire flashes forth like lightning, and the outer finds a
way in and is extinguished in the moisture, and all sorts of colours are
generated by the mixture. This affection is termed dazzling, and the object
which produces it is called bright and flashing. There is another sort of fire
which is intermediate, and which reaches and mingles with the moisture of the
eye without flashing ; and in this, the fire mingling with the ray of the
moisture, produces a colour like blood, to which we give the name of red. A
bright hue mingled with red and white gives the colour called auburn. The law
of proportion, however, according to which the several colours are formed, even
if a man knew he would be foolish in telling, for he could not give any
necessary reason, nor indeed any tolerable or probable explanation of them.
Again, red, when mingled with black and white, becomes purple, but it becomes
umber when the colours are burnt as well as mingled and the black is more
thoroughly mixed with them. Flame colour is produced by a union of auburn and
dun, and dun by an admixture of black and white ; pale yellow, by an
admixture of white and auburn. White and bright meeting, and falling upon a
full black, become dark blue, and when dark blue mingles with white, a light
blue colour is formed, as flame-colour with black makes leek green. There will
be no difficulty in seeing how and by what mixtures the colours derived from
these are made according to the rules of probability. He, however, who should
attempt to verify all this by experiment, would forget the difference of the
human and divine nature. For God only has the knowledge and also the power
which are able to combine many things into one and again resolve the one into many.
But no man either is or ever will be able to accomplish either the one or the
other operation.
These are the
elements, thus of necessity then subsisting, which the creator of the fairest
and best of created things associated with himself, when he made the
self-sufficing and most perfect God, using the necessary causes as his
ministers in the accomplishment of his work, but himself contriving the good in
all his creations. Wherefore we may distinguish two sorts of causes, the one
divine and the other necessary, and may seek for the divine in all things, as
far as our nature admits, with a view to the blessed life ; but the
necessary kind only for the sake of the divine, considering that without them
and when isolated from them, these higher things for which we look cannot be
apprehended or received or in any way shared by us.
Seeing, then, that
we have now prepared for our use the various classes of causes which are the
material out of which the remainder of our discourse must be woven, just as
wood is the material of the carpenter, let us revert in a few words to the
point at which we began, and then endeavour to add on a suitable ending to the
beginning of our tale.
As I said at first,
when all things were in disorder God created in each thing in relation to
itself, and in all things in relation to each other, all the measures and
harmonies which they could possibly receive. For in those days nothing had any
proportion except by accident ; nor did any of the things which now have
names deserve to be named at all — as, for example, fire, water, and the rest
of the elements. All these the creator first set in order, and out of them he
constructed the universe, which was a single animal comprehending in itself all
other animals, mortal and immortal. Now of the divine, he himself was the
creator, but the creation of the mortal he committed to his offspring. And
they, imitating him, received from him the immortal principle of the
soul ; and around this they proceeded to fashion a mortal body, and. made
it to be the vehicle of the so and constructed within the body a soul of
another nature which was mortal, subject to terrible and irresistible
affections — first of all, pleasure, the greatest incitement to evil ;
then, pain, which deters from good ; also rashness and fear, two foolish
counsellors, anger hard to be appeased, and hope easily led astray — these they
mingled with irrational sense and with all-daring love according to necessary
laws, and so framed man. Wherefore, fearing to pollute the divine any more than
was absolutely unavoidable, they gave to the mortal nature a separate
habitation in another part of the body, placing the neck between them to be the
isthmus and boundary, which they constructed between the head and breast, to
keep them apart. And in the breast, and in what is termed the thorax, they
encased the mortal soul ; and as the one part of this was superior and the
other inferior they divided the cavity of the thorax into two parts, as the
women’s and men’s apartments are divided in houses, and placed the midriff to
be a wall of partition between them. That part of the inferior soul which is
endowed with courage and passion and loves contention they settled nearer the
head, midway between the midriff and the neck, in order that it might be under
the rule of reason and might join with it in controlling and restraining the
desires when they are no longer willing of their own accord to obey the word of
command issuing from the citadel.
The heart, the knot
of the veins and the fountain of the blood which races through all the limbs
was set in the place of guard, that when the might of passion was roused by
reason making proclamation of any wrong assailing them from without or being
perpetrated by the desires within, quickly the whole power of feeling in the
body, perceiving these commands and threats, might obey and follow through
every turn and alley, and thus allow the principle of the best to have the
command in all of them. But the gods, foreknowing that the palpitation of the
heart in the expectation of danger and the swelling and excitement of passion
was caused by fire, formed and implanted as a supporter to the heart the lung,
which was, in the first place, soft and bloodless, and also had within hollows
like the pores of a sponge, in order that by receiving the breath and the
drink, it might give coolness and the power of respiration and alleviate the
heat. Wherefore they cut the air-channels leading to the lung, and placed the
lung about the heart as a soft spring, that, when passion was rife within, the
heart, beating against a yielding body, might be cooled and suffer less, and
might thus become more ready to join with passion in the service of reason.
The part of the
soul which desires meats and drinks and the other things of which it has need
by reason of the bodily nature, they placed between the midriff and the
boundary of the navel, contriving in all this region a sort of manger for the
food of the body ; and there they bound it down like a wild animal which
was chained up with man, and must be nourished if man was to exist. They
appointed this lower creation his place here in order that he might be always
feeding at the manger, and have his dwelling as far as might be from the
council-chamber, making as little noise and disturbance as possible, and
permitting the best part to advise quietly for the good of the whole. And
knowing that this lower principle in man would not comprehend reason, and even
if attaining to some degree of perception would never naturally care for
rational notions, but that it would be led away by phantoms and visions night
and day — to be a remedy for this, God combined with it the liver, and placed
it in the house of the lower nature, contriving that it should be solid and
smooth, and bright and sweet, and should also have a bitter quality, in order
that the power of thought, which proceeds from the mind, might be reflected as
in a mirror which receives likenesses of objects and gives back images of them
to the sight ; and so might strike terror into the desires, when, making
use of the bitter part of the liver, to which it is akin, it comes threatening
and invading, and diffusing this bitter element swiftly through the whole liver
produces colours like bile, and contracting every part makes it wrinkled and
rough ; and twisting out of its right place and contorting the lobe and
closing and shutting up the vessels and gates, causes pain and loathing. And
the converse happens when some gentle inspiration of the understanding pictures
images of an opposite character, and allays the bile and bitterness by refusing
to stir or touch the nature opposed to itself, but by making use of the natural
sweetness of the liver, corrects all things and makes them to be right and
smooth and free, and renders the portion of the soul which resides about the
liver happy and joyful, enabling it to pass the night in peace, and to practise
divination in sleep, inasmuch as it has no share in mind and reason. For the
authors of our being, remembering the command of their father when he bade them
create the human race as good as they could, that they might correct our
inferior parts and make them to attain a measure of truth, placed in the liver
the seat of divination. And herein is a proof that God has given the art of
divination not to the wisdom, but to the foolishness of man. No man, when in
his wits, attains prophetic truth and inspiration ; but when he receives
the inspired word, either his intelligence is enthralled in sleep, or he is
demented by some distemper or possession. And he who would understand what he
remembers to have been said, whether in a dream or when he was awake, by the
prophetic and inspired nature, or would determine by reason the meaning of the
apparitions which he has seen, and what indications they afford to this man or that,
of past, present or future good and evil, must first recover his wits. But,
while he continues demented, he cannot judge of the visions which he sees or
the words which he utters ; the ancient saying is very true, that “only a
man who has his wits can act or judge about himself and his own affairs.” And
for this reason it is customary to appoint interpreters to be judges of the
true inspiration. Some persons call them prophets ; they are quite unaware
that they are only the expositors of dark sayings and visions, and are not to
be called prophets at all, but only interpreters of prophecy.
Such is the nature
of the liver, which is placed as we have described in order that it may give
prophetic intimations. During the life of each individual these intimations are
plainer, but after his death the liver becomes blind, and delivers oracles too
obscure to be intelligible. The neighbouring organ [the spleen] is situated on
the left-hand side, and is constructed with a view of keeping the liver bright
and pure — like a napkin, always ready prepared and at hand to clean the
mirror. And hence, when any impurities arise in the region of the liver by
reason of disorders of the body, the loose nature of the spleen, which is
composed of a hollow and bloodless tissue, receives them all and dears them
away, and when filled with the unclean matter, swells and festers, but, again,
when the body is purged, settles down into the same place as before, and is
humbled.
Concerning the
soul, as to which part is mortal and which divine, and how and why they are
separated, and where located, if God acknowledges that we have spoken the
truth, then, and then only, can we be confident ; still, we may venture to
assert that what has been said by us is probable, and will be rendered more probable
by investigation. Let us assume thus much.
The creation of the
rest of follows next in order, and this we may investigate in a similar manner.
And it appears to be very meet that the body should be framed on the following
principles : —
The authors of our
race were aware that we should be intemperate in eating and drinking, and take
a good deal more than was necessary or proper, by reason of gluttony. In order
then that disease might not quickly destroy us, and lest our mortal race should
perish without fulfilling its end — intending to provide against this, the gods
made what is called the lower belly, to be a receptacle for the superfluous
meat and drink, and formed the convolution of the bowels, so that the food
might be prevented from passing quickly through and compelling the body to
require more food, thus producing insatiable gluttony, and making the whole
race an enemy to philosophy and music, and rebellious against the divinest
element within us.
The bones and
flesh, and other similar parts of us, were made as follows. The first principle
of all of them was the generation of the marrow. For the bonds of life which
unite the soul with the body are made fast there, and they are the root and
foundation of the human race. The marrow itself is created out of other
materials : God took such of the primary triangles as were straight and
smooth, and were adapted by their perfection to produce fire and water, and air
and earth — these, I say, he separated from their kinds, and mingling them in
due proportions with one another, made the marrow out of them to be a universal
seed of the whole race of mankind ; and in this seed he then planted and
enclosed the souls, and in the original distribution gave to the marrow as many
and various forms as the different kinds of souls were hereafter to receive.
That which, like a field, was to receive the divine seed, he made round every
way, and called that portion of the marrow, brain, intending that, when an
animal was perfected, the vessel containing this substance should be the
head ; but that which was intended to contain the remaining and mortal
part of the soul he distributed into figures at once around and elongated, and
he called them all by the name “marrow” ; and to these, as to anchors,
fastening the bonds of the whole soul, he proceeded to fashion around them the
entire framework of our body, constructing for the marrow, first of all a
complete covering of bone.
Bone was composed
by him in the following manner. Having sifted pure and smooth earth he kneaded
it and wetted it with marrow, and after that he put it into fire and then into
water, and once more into fire and again into water — in this way by frequent transfers
from one to the other he made it insoluble by either. Out of this he fashioned,
as in a lathe, a globe made of bone, which he placed around the brain, and in
this he left a narrow opening ; and around the marrow of the neck and back
he formed vertebrae which he placed under one another like pivots, beginning at
the head and extending through the whole of the trunk. Thus wishing to preserve
the entire seed, he enclosed it in a stone-like casing, inserting joints, and
using in the formation of them the power of the other or diverse as an
intermediate nature, that they might have motion and flexure. Then again,
considering that the bone would be too brittle and inflexible, and when heated
and again cooled would soon mortify and destroy the seed within — having this
in view, he contrived the sinews and the flesh, that so binding all the members
together by the sinews, which admitted of being stretched and relaxed about the
vertebrae, he might thus make the body capable of flexion and extension, while
the flesh would serve as a protection against the summer heat and against the
winter cold, and also against falls, softly and easily yielding to external
bodies, like articles made of felt ; and containing in itself a warm
moisture which in summer exudes and makes the surface damp, would impart a
nature coolness to the whole body ; and again in winter by the help of
this internal warmth would form a very tolerable defence against the frost
which surrounds it and attacks it from without. He who modelled us, considering
these things, mixed earth with fire and water and blended them ; and
making a ferment of acid and salt, he mingled it with them and formed soft and
succulent flesh. As for the sinews, he made them of a mixture of bone and
unfermented flesh, attempered so as to be in a mean, and gave them a yellow
colour ; wherefore the sinews have a firmer and more glutinous nature than
flesh, but a softer and moister nature than the bones. With these God covered
the bones and marrow, binding them together by sinews, and then enshrouded them
all in an upper covering of flesh. The more living and sensitive of the bones
he enclosed in the thinnest film of flesh, and those which had the least life
within them in the thickest and most solid flesh. So again on the joints of the
bones, where reason indicated that no more was required, he placed only a thin
covering of flesh, that it might not interfere with the flexion of our bodies
and make them unwieldy because difficult to move ; and also that it might
not, by being crowded and pressed and matted together, destroy sensation by
reason of its hardness, and impair the memory and dull the edge of
intelligence. Wherefore also the thighs and the shanks and the hips, and the
bones of the arms and the forearms, and other parts which have no joints, and
the inner bones, which on account of the rarity of the soul in the marrow are
destitute of reason — all these are abundantly provided with flesh ; but
such as have mind in them are in general less fleshy, except where the creator
has made some part solely of flesh in order to give sensation — as, for
example, the tongue. But commonly this is not the case. For the nature which
comes into being and grows up in us by a law of necessity, does not admit of
the combination of solid bone and much flesh with acute perceptions. More than
any other part the framework of the head would have had them, if they could
have co-existed, and the human race, having a strong and fleshy and sinewy
head, would have had a life twice or many times as long as it now has, and also
more healthy and free from pain.
But our creators,
considering whether they should make a longer-lived race which was worse, or a
shorter-lived race which was better, came to the conclusion that every one
ought to prefer a shorter span of life, which was better, to a longer one,
which was worse ; and therefore they covered the head with thin bone, but
not with flesh and sinews, since it had no joints ; and thus the head was
added, having more wisdom and sensation than the rest of the body, but also
being in every man far weaker. For these reasons and after this manner God
placed the sinews at the extremity of the head, in a circle round the neck, and
glued them together by the principle of likeness and fastened the extremities
of the jawbones to them below the face, and the other sinews he dispersed
throughout the body, fastening limb to limb. The framers of us framed the
mouth, as now arranged, having teeth and tongue and lips, with a view to the
necessary and the good, contriving the way in for necessary purposes, the way
out for the best purposes ; for that is necessary which enters in and
gives food to the body ; but the river of speech, which flows out of a man
and ministers to the intelligence, is the fairest and noblest of all streams.
Still the head could neither be left a bare frame of bones, on account of the
extremes of heat and cold in the different seasons, nor yet be allowed to be
wholly covered, and so become dull and senseless by reason of an overgrowth of
flesh. The fleshy nature was not therefore wholly dried up, but a large sort of
peel was parted off and remained over, which is now called the skin. This met
and grew by the help of the cerebral moisture, and became the circular
envelopment of the head. And the moisture, rising up under the sutures, watered
and closed in the skin upon the crown, forming a sort of knot. The diversity of
the sutures was caused by the power of the courses of the soul and of the food,
and the more these struggled against one another the more numerous they became,
and fewer if the struggle were less violent. This skin the divine power pierced
all round with fire, and out of the punctures which were thus made the moisture
issued forth, and the liquid and heat which was pure came away, and a mixed part
which was composed of the same material as the skin, and had a fineness equal
to the punctures, was borne up by its own impulse and extended far outside the
head, but being too slow to escape, was thrust back by the external air, and
rolled up underneath the skin, where it took root. Thus the hair sprang up in
the skin, being akin to it because it is like threads of leather, but rendered
harder and closer through the pressure of the cold, by which each hair, while
in process of separation from the skin, is compressed and cooled. Wherefore the
creator formed the head hairy, making use of the causes which I have mentioned,
and reflecting also that instead of flesh the brain needed the hair to be a
light covering or guard, which would give shade in summer and shelter in
winter, and at the same time would not impede our quickness of perception. From
the combination of sinew, skin, and bone, in the structure of the finger, there
arises a triple compound, which, when dried up, takes the form of one hard skin
partaking of all three natures, and was fabricated by these second causes, but
designed by mind which is the principal cause with an eye to the future. For
our creators well knew that women and other animals would some day be framed
out of men, and they further knew that many animals would require the use of
nails for many purposes ; wherefore they fashioned in men at their first
creation the rudiments of nails. For this purpose and for these reasons they
caused skin, hair, and nails to grow at the extremities of the limbs. And now
that all the parts and members of the mortal animal had come together, since
its life of necessity consisted of fire and breath, and it therefore wasted
away by dissolution and depletion, the gods contrived the following remedy :
They mingled a nature akin to that of man with other forms and perceptions, and
thus created another kind of animal. These are the trees and plants and seeds
which have been improved by cultivation and are now domesticated among
us ; anciently there were only the will kinds, which are older than the
cultivated. For everything that partakes of life may be truly called a living
being, and the animal of which we are now speaking partakes of the third kind
of soul, which is said to be seated between the midriff and the navel, having
no part in opinion or reason or mind, but only in feelings of pleasure and pain
and the desires which accompany them. For this nature is always in a passive
state, revolving in and about itself, repelling the motion from without and using
its own, and accordingly is not endowed by nature with the power of observing
or reflecting on its own concerns. Wherefore it lives and does not differ from
a living being, but is fixed and rooted in the same spot, having no power of
self-motion.
Now after the
superior powers had created all these natures to be food for us who are of the
inferior nature, they cut various channels through the body as through a
garden, that it might be watered as from a running stream. In the first place,
they cut two hidden channels or veins down the back where the skin and the
flesh join, which answered severally to the right and left side of the body.
These they let down along the backbone, so as to have the marrow of generation
between them, where it was most likely to flourish, and in order that the
stream coming down from above might flow freely to the other parts, and
equalise the irrigation. In the next place, they divided the veins about the
head, and interlacing them, they sent them in opposite directions ; those
coming from the right side they sent to the left of the body, and those from
the left they diverted towards the right, so that they and the skin might
together form a bond which should fasten the head to the body, since the crown
of the head was not encircled by sinews ; and also in order that the
sensations from both sides might be distributed over the whole body. And next,
they ordered the water-courses of the body in a manner which I will describe,
and which will be more easily understood if we begin by admitting that all
things which have lesser parts retain the greater, but the greater cannot
retain the lesser. Now of all natures fire has the smallest parts, and
therefore penetrates through earth and water and air and their compounds, nor
can anything hold it. And a similar principle applies to the human belly ;
for when meats and drinks enter it, it holds them, but it cannot hold air and
fire, because the particles of which they consist are smaller than its own
structure.
These elements,
therefore, God employed for the sake of distributing moisture from the belly
into the veins, weaving together network of fire and air like a weel, having at
the entrance two lesser weels ; further he constructed one of these with
two openings, and from the lesser weels he extended cords reaching all round to
the extremities of the network. All the interior of the net he made of fire,
but the lesser weels and their cavity, of air. The network he took and spread
over the newly-formed animal in the following manner : — He let the lesser
weels pass into the mouth ; there were two of them, and one he let down by
the air-pipes into the lungs, the other by the side of the air-pipes into the
belly. The former he divided into two branches, both of which he made to meet
at the channels of the nose, so that when the way through the mouth did not
act, the streams of the mouth as well were replenished through the nose. With
the other cavity (i.e. of the greater weel) he enveloped the hollow parts of
the body, and at one time he made all this to flow into the lesser weels, quite
gently, for they are composed of air, and at another time he caused the lesser
weels to flow back again ; and the net he made to find a way in and out
through the pores of the body, and the rays of fire which are bound fast within
followed the passage of the air either way, never at any time ceasing so long
as the mortal being holds together. This process, as we affirm, the name-giver
named inspiration and expiration. And all this movement, active as well as passive,
takes place in order that the body, being watered and cooled, may receive
nourishment and life ; for when the respiration is going in and out, and
the fire, which is fast bound within, follows it, and ever and anon moving to
and fro, enters through the belly and reaches the meat and drink, it dissolves
them, and dividing them into small portions and guiding them through the
passages where it goes, pumps them as from a fountain into the channels of the
veins, and makes the stream of the veins flow through the body as through a
conduit.
Let us once more
consider the phenomena of respiration, and enquire into the causes which have
made it what it is. They are as follows : — Seeing that there is no such
thing as a vacuum into which any of those things which are moved can enter, and
the breath is carried from us into the external air, the next point is, as will
be dear to every one, that it does not go into a vacant space, but pushes its
neighbour out of its place, and that which is thrust out in turn drives out its
neighbour ; and in this everything of necessity at last comes round to
that place from whence the breath came forth, and enters in there, and
following the breath, fills up the vacant space ; and this goes on like
the rotation of a wheel, because there can be no such thing as a vacuum.
Wherefore also the breast and the lungs, when they emit the breath, are
replenished by the air which surrounds the body and which enters in through the
pores of the flesh and is driven round in a circle ; and again, the air
which is sent away and passes out through the body forces the breath inwards
through the passage of the mouth and the nostrils. Now the origin of this
movement may be supposed to be as follows. In the interior of every animal the
hottest part is that which is around the blood and veins ; it is in a
manner on internal fountain of fire, which we compare to the network of a
creel, being woven all of fire and extended through the centre of the body,
while the outer parts are composed of air. Now we must admit that heat
naturally proceeds outward to its own place and to its kindred element ;
and as there are two exits for the heat, the out through the body, and the
other through the mouth and nostrils, when it moves towards the one, it drives
round the air at the other, and that which is driven round falls into the fire
and becomes warm, and that which goes forth is cooled. But when the heat
changes its place, and the particles at the other exit grow warmer, the hotter
air inclining in that direction and carried towards its native element, fire,
pushes round the air at the other ; and this being affected in the same
way and communicating the same impulse, a circular motion swaying to and from
is produced by the double process, which we call inspiration and expiration.
The phenomena of
medical cupping-glasses and of the swallowing of drink and of the projection of
bodies, whether discharged in the air or bowled along the ground, are to be
investigated on a similar principle ; and swift and slow sounds, which appear
to be high and low, and are sometimes discordant on account of their
inequality, and then again harmonical on account of the equality of the motion
which they excite in us. For when the motions of the antecedent swifter sounds
begin to pause and the two are equalised, the slower sounds overtake the
swifter and then propel them. When they overtake them they do not intrude a new
and discordant motion, but introduce the beginnings of a slower, which answers
to the swifter as it dies away, thus producing a single mixed expression out of
high and low, whence arises a pleasure which even the unwise feel, and which to
the wise becomes a higher sort of delight, being an imitation of divine harmony
in mortal motions. Moreover, as to the flowing of water, the fall of the
thunderbolt, and the marvels that are observed about the attraction of amber
and the Heraclean stones, — in none of these cases is there any
attraction ; but he who investigates rightly, will find that such
wonderful phenomena are attributable to the combination of certain conditions —
the non-existence of a vacuum, the fact that objects push one another round,
and that they change places, passing severally into their proper positions as
they are divided or combined
Such as we have
seen, is the nature and such are the causes of respiration — the subject in
which this discussion originated. For the fire cuts the food and following the
breath surges up within, fire and breath rising together and filling the veins
by drawing up out of the belly and pouring into them the cut portions of the
food ; and so the streams of food are kept flowing through the whole body
in all animals. And fresh cuttings from kindred substances, whether the fruits
of the earth or herb of the field, which God planted to be our daily food,
acquire all sorts of colours by their inter-mixture ; but red is the most
pervading of them, being created by the cutting action of fire and by the
impression which it makes on a moist substance ; and hence the liquid
which circulates in the body has a colour such as we have described. The liquid
itself we call blood, which nourishes the flesh and the whole body, whence all
parts are watered and empty places filled.
Now the process of
repletion and evacuation is effected after the manner of the universal motion
by which all kindred substances are drawn towards one another. For the external
elements which surround us are always causing us to consume away, and
distributing and sending off like to like ; the particles of blood, too,
which are divided and contained within the frame of the animal as in a sort of
heaven, are compelled to imitate the motion of the universe. Each, therefore,
of the divided parts within us, being carried to its kindred nature,
replenishes the void. When more is taken away than flows in, then we decay, and
when less, we grow and increase.
The frame of the
entire creature when young has the triangles of each kind new, and may be
compared to the keel of a vessel which is just off the stocks ; they are
locked firmly together and yet the whole mass is soft and delicate, being
freshly formed of marrow and nurtured on milk. Now when the triangles out of
which meats and drinks are composed come in from without, and are comprehended
in the body, being older and weaker than the triangles already there, the frame
of the body gets the better of them and its newer triangles cut them up, and so
the animal grows great, being nourished by a multitude of similar particles.
But when the roots of the triangles are loosened by having undergone many
conflicts with many things in the course of time, they are no longer able to
cut or assimilate the food which enters, but are themselves easily divided by
the bodies which come in from without. In this way every animal is overcome and
decays, and this affection is called old age. And at last, when the bonds by
which the triangles of the marrow are united no longer hold, and are parted by
the strain of existence, they in turn loosen the bonds of the soul, and she,
obtaining a natural release, flies away with joy. For that which takes place
according to nature is pleasant, but that which is contrary to nature is
painful. And thus death, if caused by disease or produced by wounds, is painful
and violent ; but that sort of death which comes with old age and fulfils
the debt of nature is the easiest of deaths, and is accompanied with pleasure
rather than with pain.
Now every one can
see whence diseases arise. There are four natures out of which the body is
compacted, earth and fire and water and air, and the unnatural excess or defect
of these, or the change of any of them from its own natural place into another,
or — since there are more kinds than one of fire and of the other elements —
the assumption by any of these of a wrong kind, or any similar irregularity,
produces disorders and diseases ; for when any of them is produced or
changed in a manner contrary to nature, the parts which were previously cool
grow warm, and those which were dry become moist, and the light become heavy,
and the heavy light ; all sorts of changes occur. For, as we affirm, a
thing can only remain the same with itself, whole and sound, when the same is
added to it, or subtracted from it, in the same respect and in the same manner
and in due proportion ; and whatever comes or goes away in violation of
these laws causes all manner of changes and infinite diseases and corruptions.
Now there is a second class of structures which are also natural, and this
affords a second opportunity of observing diseases to him who would understand
them. For whereas marrow and bone and flesh and sinews are composed of the four
elements, and the blood, though after another manner, is likewise formed out of
them, most diseases originate in the way which I have described ; but the
worst of all owe their severity to the fact that the generation of these
substances stances in a wrong order ; they are then destroyed. For the
natural order is that the flesh and sinews should be made of blood, the sinews
out of the fibres to which they are akin, and the flesh out of the dots which
are formed when the fibres are separated. And the glutinous and rich matter
which comes away from the sinews and the flesh, not only glues the flesh to the
bones, but nourishes and imparts growth to the bone which surrounds the marrow ;
and by reason of the solidity of the bones, that which filters through consists
of the purest and smoothest and oiliest sort of triangles, dropping like dew
from the bones and watering the marrow.
Now when each
process takes place in this order, health commonly results ; when in the
opposite order, disease. For when the flesh becomes decomposed and sends back
the wasting substance into the veins, then an over-supply of blood of diverse
kinds, mingling with air in the veins, having variegated colours and bitter
properties, as well as acid and saline qualities, contains all sorts of bile
and serum and phlegm. For all things go the wrong way, and having become
corrupted, first they taint the blood itself, and then ceasing to give
nourishment the body they are carried along the veins in all directions, no
longer preserving the order of their natural courses, but at war with
themselves, because they receive no good from one another, and are hostile to
the abiding constitution of the body, which they corrupt and dissolve. The
oldest part of the flesh which is corrupted, being hard to decompose, from long
burning grows black, and from being everywhere corroded becomes bitter, and is
injurious to every part of the body which is still uncorrupted. Sometimes, when
the bitter element is refined away, the black part assumes an acidity which
takes the place of the bitterness ; at other times the bitterness being
tinged with blood has a redder colour ; and this, when mixed with black,
takes the hue of grass ; and again, an auburn colour mingles with the
bitter matter when new flesh is decomposed by the fire which surrounds the
internal flame — to all which symptoms some physician perhaps, or rather some
philosopher, who had the power of seeing in many dissimilar things one nature
deserving of a name, has assigned the common name of bile. But the other kinds
of bile are variously distinguished by their colours. As for serum, that sort
which is the watery part of blood is innocent, but that which is a secretion of
black and acid bile is malignant when mingled by the power of heat with any
salt substance, and is then called acid phlegm. Again, the substance which is
formed by the liquefaction of new and tender flesh when air is present, if
inflated and encased in liquid so as to form bubbles, which separately are
invisible owing to their small size, but when collected are of a bulk which is
visible, and have a white colour arising out of the generation of foam — all
this decomposition of tender flesh when inter-mingled with air is termed by us
white phlegm. And the whey or sediment of newly-formed phlegm is sweat and
tears, and includes the various daily discharges by which the body is purified.
Now all these become causes of disease when the blood is not replenished in a
natural manner by food and drink but gains bulk from opposite sources in
violation of the laws of nature. When the several parts of the flesh are
separated by disease, if the foundation remains, the power of the disorder is
only half as great, and there is still a prospect of an easy recovery ;
but when that which binds the flesh to the bones is diseased, and no longer
being separated from the muscles and sinews, ceases to give nourishment to the
bone and to unite flesh and bone, and from being oily and smooth and glutinous
becomes rough and salt and dry, owing to bad regimen, then all the substance
thus corrupted crumbles away under the flesh and the sinews, and separates from
the bone, and the fleshy parts fall away from their foundation and leave the
sinews bare and full of brine, and the flesh again gets into the circulation of
the blood and makes the previously-mentioned disorders still greater. And if
these bodily affections be severe, still worse are the prior disorders ;
as when the bone itself, by reason of the density of the flesh, does not obtain
sufficient air, but becomes mouldy and hot and gangrened and receives no
nutriment, and the natural process is inverted, and the bone crumbling passes
into the food, and the food into the flesh, and the flesh again falling into
the blood makes all maladies that may occur more virulent than those already
mentioned. But the worst case of all is when the marrow is diseased, either
from excess or defect ; and this is the cause of the very greatest and
most fatal disorders, in which the whole course of the body is reversed.
There is a third
class of diseases which may be conceived of as arising in three ways ; for
they are produced sometimes by wind, and sometimes by phlegm, and sometimes by
bile. When the lung, which is the dispenser of the air to the body, is
obstructed by rheums and its passages are not free, some of them not acting,
while through others too much air enters, then the parts which are unrefreshed
by air corrode, while in other parts the excess of air forcing its way through
the veins distorts them and decomposing the body is enclosed in the midst of it
and occupies the midriff thus numberless painful diseases are produced,
accompanied by copious sweats. And oftentimes when the flesh is dissolved in
the body, wind, generated within and unable to escape, is the source of quite
as much pain as the air coming in from without ; but the greatest pain is
felt when the wind gets about the sinews and the veins of the shoulders, and
swells them up, so twists back the great tendons and the sinews which are
connected with them. These disorders are called tetanus and opisthotonus, by
reason of the tension which accompanies them. The cure of them is
difficult ; relief is in most cases given by fever supervening. The white
phlegm, though dangerous when detained within by reason of the air-bubbles, yet
if it can communicate with the outside air, is less severe, and only discolours
the body, generating leprous eruptions and similar diseases. When it is mingled
with black bile and dispersed about the courses of the head, which are the
divinest part of us, the attack if coming on in sleep, is not so severe ;
but when assailing those who are awake it is hard to be got rid of, and being
an affection of a sacred part, is most justly called sacred. An acid and salt
phlegm, again, is the source of all those diseases which take the form of
catarrh, but they have many names because the places into which they flow are
manifold.
Inflammations of
the body come from burnings and inflamings, and all of them originate in bile.
When bile finds a means of discharge, it boils up and sends forth all sorts of
tumours ; but when imprisoned within, it generates many inflammatory
diseases, above all when mingled with pure blood ; since it then displaces
the fibres which are scattered about in the blood and are designed to maintain
the balance of rare and dense, in order that the blood may not be so liquefied
by heat as to exude from the pores of the body, nor again become too dense and
thus find a difficulty in circulating through the veins. The fibres are so
constituted as to maintain this balance ; and if any one brings them all
together when the blood is dead and in process of cooling, then the blood which
remains becomes fluid, but if they are left alone, they soon congeal by reason
of the surrounding cold. The fibres having this power over the blood, bile,
which is only stale blood, and which from being flesh is dissolved again into
blood, at the first influx coming in little by little, hot and liquid, is
congealed by the power of the fibres ; and so congealing and made to cool,
it produces internal cold and shuddering. When it enters with more of a flood
and overcomes the fibres by its heat, and boiling up throws them into disorder,
if it have power enough to maintain its supremacy, it penetrates the marrow and
burns up what may be termed the cables of the soul, and sets her free ;
but when there is not so much of it, and the body though wasted still holds
out, the bile is itself mastered, and is either utterly banished, or is thrust
through the veins into the lower or upper-belly, and is driven out of the body
like an exile from a state in which there has been civil war ; whence
arise diarrhoeas and dysenteries, and all such disorders. When the constitution
is disordered by excess of fire, continuous heat and fever are the
result ; when excess of air is the cause, then the fever is
quotidian ; when of water, which is a more sluggish element than either
fire or air, then the fever is a tertian ; when of earth, which is the
most sluggish of the four, and is only purged away in a four-fold period, the
result is a quartan fever, which can with difficulty be shaken off.
Such is the manner
in which diseases of the body arise ; the disorders of the soul, which depend
upon the body, originate as follows. We must acknowledge disease of the mind to
be a want of intelligence ; and of this there are two kinds ; to wit,
madness and ignorance. In whatever state a man experiences either of them, that
state may be called disease ; and excessive pains and pleasures are justly
to be regarded as the greatest diseases to which the soul is liable. For a man
who is in great joy or in great pain, in his unseasonable eagerness to attain
the one and to avoid the other, is not able to see or to hear anything
rightly ; but he is mad, and is at the time utterly incapable of any
participation in reason. He who has the seed about the spinal marrow too
plentiful and overflowing, like a tree overladen with fruit, has many throes,
and also obtains many pleasures in his desires and their offspring, and is for
the most part of his life deranged, because his pleasures and pains are so very
great ; his soul is rendered foolish and disordered by his body ; yet
he is regarded not as one diseased, but as one who is voluntarily bad, which is
a mistake. The truth is that the intemperance of love is a disease of the soul
due chiefly to the moisture and fluidity which is produced in one of the
elements by the loose consistency of the bones. And in general, all that which
is termed the incontinence of pleasure and is deemed a reproach under the idea
that the wicked voluntarily do wrong is not justly a matter for reproach. For
no man is voluntarily bad ; but the bad become bad by reason of an ill
disposition of the body and bad education, things which are hateful to every
man and happen to him against his will. And in the case of pain too in like
manner the soul suffers much evil from the body. For where the acid and briny
phlegm and other bitter and bilious humours wander about in the body, and find
no exit or escape, but are pent up within and mingle their own vapours with the
motions of the soul, and are blended, with them, they produce all sorts of
diseases, more or fewer, and in every degree of intensity ; and being
carried to the three places of the soul, whichever they may severally assail,
they create infinite varieties of ill-temper and melancholy, of rashness and
cowardice, and also of forgetfulness and stupidity. Further, when to this evil
constitution of body evil forms of government are added and evil discourses are
uttered in private as well as in public, and no sort of instruction is given in
youth to cure these evils, then all of us who are bad become bad from two
causes which are entirely beyond our control. In such cases the planters are to
blame rather than the plants, the educators rather than the educated. But
however that may be, we should endeavour as far as we can by education, and
studies, and learning, to avoid vice and attain virtue ; this, however, is
part of another subject.
There is a
corresponding enquiry concerning the mode of treatment by which the mind and
the body are to be preserved, about which it is meet and right that I should
say a word in turn ; for it is more our duty to speak of the good than of
the evil. Everything that is good is fair, and the animal fair is not without
proportion, and the animal which is to be fair must have due proportion. Now we
perceive lesser symmetries or proportions and reason about them, but of the
highest and greatest we take no heed ; for there is no proportion or
disproportion more productive of health and disease, and virtue and vice, than
that between soul and body. This however we do not perceive, nor do we reflect
that when a weak or small frame is the vehicle of a great and mighty soul, or
conversely, when a little soul is encased in a large body, then the whole
animal is not fair, for it lacks the most important of all symmetries ;
but the due proportion of mind and body is the fairest and loveliest of all
sights to him who has the seeing eye. Just as a body which has a leg too long,
or which is unsymmetrical in some other respect, is an unpleasant sight, and
also, when doing its share of work, is much distressed and makes convulsive
efforts, and often stumbles through awkwardness, and is the cause of infinite
evil to its own self — in like manner we should conceive of the double nature
which we call the living being ; and when in this compound there is an
impassioned soul more powerful than the body, that soul, I say, convulses and
fills with disorders the whole inner nature of man ; and when eager in the
pursuit of some sort of learning or study, causes wasting ; or again, when
teaching or disputing in private or in public, and strifes and controversies
arise, inflames and dissolves the composite frame of man and introduces
rheums ; and the nature of this phenomenon is not understood by most
professors of medicine, who ascribe it to the opposite of the real cause. And
once more, when body large and too strong for the soul is united to a small and
weak intelligence, then inasmuch as there are two desires natural to man, — one
of food for the sake of the body, and one of wisdom for the sake of the diviner
part of us — then, I say, the motions of the stronger, getting the better and
increasing their own power, but making the soul dull, and stupid, and
forgetful, engender ignorance, which is the greatest of diseases. There is one
protection against both kinds of disproportion : — that we should not move
the body without the soul or the soul without the body, and thus they will be
on their guard against each other, and be healthy and well balanced. And
therefore the mathematician or any one else whose thoughts are much absorbed in
some intellectual pursuit, must allow his body also to have due exercise, and
practise gymnastic ; and he who is careful to fashion the body, should in
turn impart to the soul its proper motions, and should cultivate music and all
philosophy, if he would deserve to be called truly fair and truly good. And the
separate parts should be treated in the same manner, in imitation of the
pattern of the universe ; for as the body is heated and also cooled within
by the elements which enter into it, and is again dried up and moistened by
external things, and experiences these and the like affections from both kinds
of motions, the result is that the body if given up to motion when in a state
of quiescence is overmastered and perishes ; but if any one, in imitation
of that which we call the foster-mother and nurse of the universe, will not
allow the body ever to be inactive, but is always producing motions and
agitations through its whole extent, which form the natural defence against
other motions both internal and external, and by moderate exercise reduces to
order according to their affinities the particles and affections which are
wandering about the body, as we have already said when speaking of the
universe, he will not allow enemy placed by the side of enemy to stir up wars
and disorders in the body, but he will place friend by the side of friend, so
as to create health.
Now of all motions
that is the best which is produced in a thing by itself, for it is most akin to
the motion of thought and of the universe ; but that motion which is
caused by others is not so good, and worst of all is that which moves the body,
when at rest, in parts only and by some external agency. Wherefore of all modes
of purifying and reuniting the body the best is gymnastic ; the next best
is a surging motion, as in sailing or any other mode of conveyance which is not
fatiguing ; the third sort of motion may be of use in a case of extreme
necessity, but in any other will be adopted by no man of sense : I mean
the purgative treatment of physicians ; for diseases unless they are very
dangerous should not be irritated by medicines, since every form of disease is
in a manner akin to the living being, whose complex frame has an appointed term
of life. For not the whole race only, but each individual — barring inevitable
accidents — comes into the world having a fixed span, and the triangles in us
are originally framed with power to last for a certain time, beyond which no
man prolong his life. And this holds also of the constitution of
diseases ; if any one regardless of the appointed time tries to subdue
them by medicine, he only aggravates and multiplies them. Wherefore we ought
always to manage them by regimen, as far as a man can spare the time, and not
provoke a disagreeable enemy by medicines.
Enough of the composite
animal, and of the body which is a part of him, and of the manner in which a
man may train and be trained by himself so as to live most according to
reason : and we must above and before all provide that the element which
is to train him shall be the fairest and best adapted to that purpose. A minute
discussion of this subject would be a serious task ; but if, as before, I
am to give only an outline, the subject may not unfitly be summed up as
follows.
I have often
remarked that there are three kinds of soul located within us, having each of
them motions, and I must now repeat in the fewest words possible, that one
part, if remaining inactive and ceasing from its natural motion, must
necessarily become very weak, but that which is trained and exercised, very
strong. Wherefore we should take care that the movements of the different parts
of the soul should be in due proportion.
And we should
consider that God gave the sovereign part of the human soul to be the divinity
of each one, being that part which, as we say, dwells at the top of the body,
inasmuch as we are a plant not of an earthly but of a heavenly growth, raises
us from earth to our kindred who are in heaven. And in this we say truly ;
for the divine power suspended the head and root of us from that place where
the generation of the soul first began, and thus made the whole body upright.
When a man is always occupied with the cravings of desire and ambition, and is
eagerly striving to satisfy them, all his thoughts must be mortal, and, as far
as it is possible altogether to become such, he must be mortal every whit,
because he has cherished his mortal part. But he who has been earnest in the
love of knowledge and of true wisdom, and has exercised his intellect more than
any other part of him, must have thoughts immortal and divine, if he attain
truth, and in so far as human nature is capable of sharing in immortality, he
must altogether be immortal ; and since he is ever cherishing the divine
power, and has the divinity within him in perfect order, he will be perfectly
happy. Now there is only one way of taking care of things, and this is to give
to each the food and motion which are natural to it. And the motions which are
naturally akin to the divine principle within us are the thoughts and revolutions
of the universe. These each man should follow, and correct the courses of the
head which were corrupted at our birth, and by learning the harmonies and
revolutions of the universe, should assimilate the thinking being to the
thought, renewing his original nature, and having assimilated them should
attain to that perfect life which the gods have set before mankind, both for
the present and the future.
Thus our original
design of discoursing about the universe down to the creation of man is nearly
completed. A brief mention may be made of the generation of other animals, so
far as the subject admits of brevity ; in this manner our argument will
best attain a due proportion. On the subject of animals, then, the following
remarks may be offered. Of the men who came into the world, those who were
cowards or led unrighteous lives may with reason be supposed to have changed
into the nature of women in the second generation. And this was the reason why
at that time the gods created in us the desire of sexual intercourse,
contriving in man one animated substance, and in woman another, which they
formed respectively in the following manner. The outlet for drink by which
liquids pass through the lung under the kidneys and into the bladder, which
receives then by the pressure of the air emits them, was so fashioned by them
as to penetrate also into the body of the marrow, which passes from the head
along the neck and through the back, and which in the preceding discourse we
have named the seed. And the seed having life, and becoming endowed with
respiration, produces in that part in which it respires a lively desire of
emission, and thus creates in us the love of procreation. Wherefore also in men
the organ of generation becoming rebellious and masterful, like an animal
disobedient to reason, and maddened with the sting of lust, seeks to gain
absolute sway ; and the same is the case with the so-called womb or matrix
of women ; the animal within them is desirous of procreating children, and
when remaining unfruitful long beyond its proper time, gets discontented and
angry, and wandering in every direction through the body, closes up the
passages of the breath, and, by obstructing respiration, drives them to
extremity, causing all varieties of disease, until at length the desire and
love of the man and the woman, bringing them together and as it were plucking
the fruit from the tree, sow in the womb, as in a field, animals unseen by
reason of their smallness and without form ; these again are separated and
matured within ; they are then finally brought out into the light, and
thus the generation of animals is completed.
Thus were created
women and the female sex in general. But the race of birds was created out of
innocent light-minded men, who, although their minds were directed toward
heaven, imagined, in their simplicity, that the clearest demonstration of the
things above was to be obtained by sight ; these were remodelled and
transformed into birds, and they grew feathers instead of hair. The race of
wild pedestrian animals, again, came from those who had no philosophy in any of
their thoughts, and never considered at all about the nature of the heavens,
because they had ceased to use the courses of the head, but followed the
guidance of those parts of the soul which are in the breast. In consequence of
these habits of theirs they had their front-legs and their heads resting upon
the earth to which they were drawn by natural affinity ; and the crowns of
their heads were elongated and of all sorts of shapes, into which the courses
of the soul were crushed by reason of disuse. And this was the reason why they
were created quadrupeds and polypods : God gave the more senseless of them
the more support that they might be more attracted to the earth. And the most
foolish of them, who trail their bodies entirely upon the ground and have no
longer any need of feet, he made without feet to crawl upon the earth. The
fourth class were the inhabitants of the water : these were made out of
the most entirely senseless and ignorant of all, whom the transformers did not
think any longer worthy of pure respiration, because they possessed a soul
which was made impure by all sorts of transgression ; and instead of the
subtle and pure medium of air, they gave them the deep and muddy sea to be
their element of respiration ; and hence arose the race of fishes and
oysters, and other aquatic animals, which have received the most remote
habitations as a punishment of their outlandish ignorance. These are the laws
by which animals pass into one another, now, as ever, changing as they lose or
gain wisdom and folly.
We may now say that
our discourse about the nature of the universe has an end. The world has
received animals, mortal and immortal, and is fulfilled with them, and has
become a visible animal containing the visible — the sensible God who is the
image of the intellectual, the greatest, best, fairest, most perfect — the one
only begotten heaven.