from
The Metaphysics
Book
A
All
men by nature desire understanding. A sign of this is their liking of
sensations; for even apart from the need for these and other things they
are liked for their own sake and of all sensations those received by means
of the eyes are liked the most for not only for the sake of doing
something else, but even if we are not going to do something else, we
prefer, as the saying goes, seeing to other sensations. The cause of this
is the fact that of all the sensations seeing makes us know in the highest
degree and makes clear many differences in things.
Now
art comes into being when out of many notions from experience we form one
universal belief concerning similar facts. For to have a belief that when
Callias was having this disease this benefited him, and similarly with
Socrates and many other individuals, is a matter of experience; but to
have a belief that this benefited all persons of a certain kind who were
having this sickness such as the phlegmatic
or the bilious or those burning with high fever is a matter of art.
Experience
does not seem to differ from art where something is to be done; in fact we
observe that men of experience succeed more than men who have the theory
but have no experience. The cause of this is that experience is knowledge
of individuals but art is universal knowledge and all actions and
productions deal with individuals. The doctor does not cure a man
universally taken, except accidentally, but Callias or Socrates or someone
else to whom also the essence of man happens to belong. If then someone
without experience has the theory and knows the universal but is ignorant
of the individual included under this universal he will often fail to
cure; for it is rather the individual that is curable. Nevertheless we
regard understanding and comprehension as belonging more to art than to
experience and we believe that artists are wiser than men of experience;
and this indicates that wisdom attributed to men in virtue of their
understanding rather than their experience in-as-much-as men of
understanding know the cause but men of experience do not. . . .
Book
T
There
is a science which investigates being qua being and what belongs
essentially to it. This science is not
the same as any of the so-called “special sciences”; for none
or those sciences examines universally being qua being, but, cutting off
some part of it, each of them investigates the attributes of that part, as
in the case of mathematical sciences. Now since we are seeking the
principles and the highest causes, clearly these must belong to some
nature in virtue or itself. If, then, also those who were seeking the
elements of things were seeking these principles, these elements too must
be elements of being, not accidentally, but qua being. Accordingly, it is
of being qua being that we, too, must find the first causes.
Book
Z
The
term “being” is used in several senses. . . . In one sense, it
signifies a whatness and a this; in another, it signifies a quality or a
quantity or one of the others which are predicated in this way. Although
“being” is used in so many different senses, it is evident that of
these the primary sense is whatness, and used in this sense it signifies a
substance. For when we state that this has some quality, we say that it is
good or bad but not that it is three cubits long or a man; but when we
state what it is, we say that it is a man or a god but not white or hot or
three cubits long. The others are called “beings” in view of the fact
that they are quantities of being which is spoken or in this primary
sense, or qualities of it, or affections of it, or something else of this
kind.... Thus, being in the primary sense, not in the qualified sense but
without qualification, would be a substance.
The
term “substance” is spoken of, if not in more, still in four main
senses; for the essence is thought to be the substance of an individual,
and the universal, and the genus, and fourthly the underlying subject. The
subject is that of which the others are said, but the subject is not said
of anything else. And so we must describe first the subject for the
primary subject is thought to be a substance in the highest degree.
From
what has been said it follows that matter is a substance. But this is
impossible; for to be separable and a this is thought to belong most of
all to a substance. Accordingly, the form or the composite would seem to
be a substance to a higher degree than the matter. The composite
substance, that is, the composite of matter and shape, may be laid aside;
for it is posterior and clear. Matter, too, is in a sense evident. But we
must examine the third, for this is the most perplexing.
In
one sense, the subject is said to be the matter; in another sense it is
said to be the form; in a third, it is said to he a composite of these. By
“matter” I mean, for instance, bronze; by the “form,” the shape of
its outward appearance; and by “the composite of these,” the statue as
a composite. Thus, if the form is prior to matter and is a being to a
higher degree than the matter, for the same reason it will be prior to the
composite of form and matter.
.
. . here, the purpose is to start with what is more known to the
individual and proceed to make known to the individual what is known by
nature. Now what is known and first to each individual is often known
lightly and has little or no being. Nevertheless, from what is poorly
knowable but knowable to oneself one must make an effort to know what is
generally knowable, proceeding . . . from what is knowable to oneself.
It
is also evident that most of what are regarded as substances are
potentialities. These are the parts of animals (for none of them exists
separately, and when separated, even then, they all exist as matter), and
earth, and fire, and air; for none of these is one, but they all exist
like a heap until they are transformed and a unity is produced out of
them. One might he led to believe that, most of all, the parts of living
things which are near the soul exist both actually and potentially, in
view of the fact that they have their principles of motion somewhere in
their joints; and on account of this, some animals continue living after
they are divided. Yet, when the animal is one and is continuous by nature,
and not by force or even by being grown together, every part exists
potentially; for that which is one by force or by being grown together is
abnormal.
Book
H
It
is evident . . . that if the substance is the cause of being of each
thing, then it is in these differentiae that we must seek the cause of the
being of each of these things. Now none of these differentiae is a
substance, not even if combined, but in each case it is something
analogous to substance; and just as in substances that which is a
predicate of matter is the actuality itself, so also in the other
definitions, that which is a predicate is to the highest degree the
actuality. For example, if we are to define a threshold, we should say
“wood or stone in such-and-such a position” (or, also the final cause
is present in some cases), and ice as “water frozen or condensed in
such-and-such a way;” and we should define harmony as “such-and-such a
combination of high and low,” and the rest in the same manner.
It
is evident from these that there is a distinct actuality for distinct
matter, and a distinct formula .... On account of this, in defining what a
house is, those who say it is stones and bricks and wood speak of what is
potentially a house, for these are the matter; those who say that it is a
receptacle for sheltering animals or goods, or some other such thing,
speak of the actuality of the house. But those who combine both, speak of
the third kind or substance, the one composed of matter and form . . . .
From
what has been said it is evident what a sensible substance is and how it
exists; in one sense it is the matter, in another it is the form or
actuality, and in a third it is the composite or these two.
Book
O
Since
we have discussed what is called “a potency” with respect to action,
let us explain what actuality is and what sort of object it is. For if
this is distinguished, the potential [or capable], too, will be at the
same time clear in view of the fact that by “potential” we mean not
only that whose nature is to move another or to be moved by another
(whether without qualification or in some manner), but also something
else; and it is because of our inquiry into the later sense of
“potential” that we have discussed the former senses.
.
. . things which are posterior in generation are prior in form or in
substance: for example, an adult is prior to a child, and a man is prior
to seed; for the former in each case already has the form, the later does
not. Also, everything which is being generated proceeds towards a
principle and an end. For the final cause [or, that for the sake of which]
is a principle, and generation is of the sake of an end; and the end is
the actuality, and potentiality is viewed as being for the sake of this.
Animals do not see in order to have sight, but they have sight in order to
see. Likewise, men have the art of building in order to build, and men
have the power of investigation in order to investigate. . . .
.
. . performance is an end, and actuality is performance. And so even the
name “actuality” is derived from the name “work” and points to
“actuality.”
It
is evident, then, that actuality is prior to potency and to every
principle of change.
Book
V
Since
the account given in this manner is possible, and if it were not, the
universe would have been generated from Night, or from the togetherness of
all things or from nonbeing, the difficulties may be regarded as solved,
and so there is something which is always moved with an unceasing motion,
which is circular; and this is clear not only by arguments but also from
the facts. So, the first heaven must be eternal; and, further, there is
also something which this moves. And since that which is moved and is a
mover is thus an intermediate, there is something which causes motion
without being moved, and this is eternal, a substance, and an actuality.
And this is the way in which the object of desire or the intelligible
object moves, namely, without itself being moved. Of these, the primary
objects are the same, for the object of desire is that which appears to be
noble, and the primary object of wish is that which is noble.
Such,
then, is the principle upon which depends the heaven and nature. And its
activity is like the best which we can have but for a little while. For it
exists in this manner eternally (which is impossible for us), since its
actuality is also pleasure. And it is because of this [activity] that
being awake, sensing, and thinking are most pleasant, and hopes and
memories are pleasant because of these. Now thinking according to itself
is of the best according to itself, and thinking in the highest degree is
of that which is best in the highest degree. Thus, in partaking of the
intelligible, it is of Himself that the Intellect is thinking. . . .
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