Physics
By Aristotle
Part 1
Everything which changes does so in one of three senses. It may change
(1) accidentally, as for instance when we say that something musical walks,
that which walks being something in which aptitude for music is an accident.
Again (2) a thing is said without qualification to change because something
belonging to it changes, i.e. in statements which refer to part of the
thing in question: thus the body is restored to health because the eye
or the chest, that is to say a part of the whole body, is restored to health.
And above all there is (3) the case of a thing which is in motion neither
accidentally nor in respect of something else belonging to it, but in virtue
of being itself directly in motion. Here we have a thing which is essentially
movable: and that which is so is a different thing according to the particular
variety of motion: for instance it may be a thing capable of alteration:
and within the sphere of alteration it is again a different thing according
as it is capable of being restored to health or capable of being heated.
And there are the same distinctions in the case of the mover: (1) one thing
causes motion accidentally, (2) another partially (because something belonging
to it causes motion), (3) another of itself directly, as, for instance,
the physician heals, the hand strikes. We have, then, the following factors:
(a) on the one hand that which directly causes motion, and (b) on the other
hand that which is in motion: further, we have (c) that in which motion
takes place, namely time, and (distinct from these three) (d) that from
which and (e) that to which it proceeds: for every motion proceeds from
something and to something, that which is directly in motion being distinct
from that to which it is in motion and that from which it is in motion:
for instance, we may take the three things 'wood', 'hot', and 'cold', of
which the first is that which is in motion, the second is that to which
the motion proceeds, and the third is that from which it proceeds. This
being so, it is clear that the motion is in the wood, not in its form:
for the motion is neither caused nor experienced by the form or the place
or the quantity. So we are left with a mover, a moved, and a goal of motion.
I do not include the starting-point of motion: for it is the goal rather
than the starting-point of motion that gives its name to a particular process
of change. Thus 'perishing' is change to not-being, though it is also true
that that that which perishes changes from being: and 'becoming' is change
to being, though it is also change from not-being.
Now a definition of motion has been given above, from which it
will be seen that every goal of motion, whether it be a form, an affection,
or a place, is immovable, as, for instance, knowledge and heat. Here, however,
a difficulty may be raised. Affections, it may be said, are motions, and
whiteness is an affection: thus there may be change to a motion. To this
we may reply that it is not whiteness but whitening that is a motion. Here
also the same distinctions are to be observed: a goal of motion may be
so accidentally, or partially and with reference to something other than
itself, or directly and with no reference to anything else: for instance,
a thing which is becoming white changes accidentally to an object of thought,
the colour being only accidentally the object of thought; it changes to
colour, because white is a part of colour, or to Europe, because Athens
is a part of Europe; but it changes essentially to white colour. It is
now clear in what sense a thing is in motion essentially, accidentally,
or in respect of something other than itself, and in what sense the phrase
'itself directly' is used in the case both of the mover and of the moved:
and it is also clear that the motion is not in the form but in that which
is in motion, that is to say 'the movable in activity'. Now accidental
change we may leave out of account: for it is to be found in everything,
at any time, and in any respect. Change which is not accidental on the
other hand is not to be found in everything, but only in contraries, in
things intermediate contraries, and in contradictories, as may be proved
by induction. An intermediate may be a starting-point of change, since
for the purposes of the change it serves as contrary to either of two contraries:
for the intermediate is in a sense the extremes. Hence we speak of the
intermediate as in a sense a contrary relatively to the extremes and of
either extreme as a contrary relatively to the intermediate: for instance,
the central note is low relatively-to the highest and high relatively to
the lowest, and grey is light relatively to black and dark relatively to
white.
And since every change is from something to something-as the word
itself (metabole) indicates, implying something 'after' (meta) something
else, that is to say something earlier and something later-that which changes
must change in one of four ways: from subject to subject, from subject
to nonsubject, from non-subject to subject, or from non-subject to non-subject,
where by 'subject' I mean what is affirmatively expressed. So it follows
necessarily from what has been said above that there are only three kinds
of change, that from subject to subject, that from subject to non-subject,
and that from non-subject to subject: for the fourth conceivable kind,
that from non-subject to nonsubject, is not change, as in that case there
is no opposition either of contraries or of contradictories.
Now change from non-subject to subject, the relation being that
of contradiction, is 'coming to be'-'unqualified coming to be' when the
change takes place in an unqualified way, 'particular coming to be' when
the change is change in a particular character: for instance, a change
from not-white to white is a coming to be of the particular thing, white,
while change from unqualified not-being to being is coming to be in an
unqualified way, in respect of which we say that a thing 'comes to be'
without qualification, not that it 'comes to be' some particular thing.
Change from subject to non-subject is 'perishing'-'unqualified perishing'
when the change is from being to not-being, 'particular perishing' when
the change is to the opposite negation, the distinction being the same
as that made in the case of coming to be.
Now the expression 'not-being' is used in several senses: and there
can be motion neither of that which 'is not' in respect of the affirmation
or negation of a predicate, nor of that which 'is not' in the sense that
it only potentially 'is', that is to say the opposite of that which actually
'is' in an unqualified sense: for although that which is 'not-white' or
'not-good' may nevertheless he in motion accidentally (for example that
which is 'not-white' might be a man), yet that which is without qualification
'not-so-and-so' cannot in any sense be in motion: therefore it is impossible
for that which is not to be in motion. This being so, it follows that 'becoming'
cannot be a motion: for it is that which 'is not' that 'becomes'. For however
true it may be that it accidentally 'becomes', it is nevertheless correct
to say that it is that which 'is not' that in an unqualified sense 'becomes'.
And similarly it is impossible for that which 'is not' to be at
rest.
There are these difficulties, then, in the way of the assumption
that that which 'is not' can be in motion: and it may be further objected
that, whereas everything which is in motion is in space, that which 'is
not' is not in space: for then it would be somewhere.
So, too, 'perishing' is not a motion: for a motion has for its
contrary either another motion or rest, whereas 'perishing' is the contrary
of 'becoming'.
Since, then, every motion is a kind of change, and there are only
the three kinds of change mentioned above, and since of these three those
which take the form of 'becoming' and 'perishing', that is to say those
which imply a relation of contradiction, are not motions: it necessarily
follows that only change from subject to subject is motion. And every such
subject is either a contrary or an intermediate (for a privation may be
allowed to rank as a contrary) and can be affirmatively expressed, as naked,
toothless, or black. If, then, the categories are severally distinguished
as Being, Quality, Place, Time, Relation, Quantity, and Activity or Passivity,
it necessarily follows that there are three kinds of motion-qualitative,
quantitative, and local.
Part 2
In respect of Substance there is no motion, because Substance has
no contrary among things that are. Nor is there motion in respect of Relation:
for it may happen that when one correlative changes, the other, although
this does not itself change, is no longer applicable, so that in these
cases the motion is accidental. Nor is there motion in respect of Agent
and Patient-in fact there can never be motion of mover and moved, because
there cannot be motion of motion or becoming of becoming or in general
change of change.
For in the first place there are two senses in which motion of
motion is conceivable. (1) The motion of which there is motion might be
conceived as subject; e.g. a man is in motion because he changes from fair
to dark. Can it be that in this sense motion grows hot or cold, or changes
place, or increases or decreases? Impossible: for change is not a subject.
Or (2) can there be motion of motion in the sense that some other subject
changes from a change to another mode of being, as e.g. a man changes from
falling ill to getting well? Even this is possible only in an accidental
sense. For, whatever the subject may be, movement is change from one form
to another. (And the same holds good of becoming and perishing, except
that in these processes we have a change to a particular kind of opposite,
while the other, motion, is a change to a different kind.) So, if there
is to be motion of motion, that which is changing from health to sickness
must simultaneously be changing from this very change to another. It is
clear, then, that by the time that it has become sick, it must also have
changed to whatever may be the other change concerned (for that it should
be at rest, though logically possible, is excluded by the theory). Moreover
this other can never be any casual change, but must be a change from something
definite to some other definite thing. So in this case it must be the opposite
change, viz. convalescence. It is only accidentally that there can be change
of change, e.g. there is a change from remembering to forgetting only because
the subject of this change changes at one time to knowledge, at another
to ignorance.
In the second place, if there is to be change of change and becoming
of becoming, we shall have an infinite regress. Thus if one of a series
of changes is to be a change of change, the preceding change must also
be so: e.g. if simple becoming was ever in process of becoming, then that
which was becoming simple becoming was also in process of becoming, so
that we should not yet have arrived at what was in process of simple becoming
but only at what was already in process of becoming in process of becoming.
And this again was sometime in process of becoming, so that even then we
should not have arrived at what was in process of simple becoming. And
since in an infinite series there is no first term, here there will be
no first stage and therefore no following stage either. On this hypothesis,
then, nothing can become or be moved or change.
Thirdly, if a thing is capable of any particular motion, it is
also capable of the corresponding contrary motion or the corresponding
coming to rest, and a thing that is capable of becoming is also capable
of perishing: consequently, if there be becoming of becoming, that which
is in process of becoming is in process of perishing at the very moment
when it has reached the stage of becoming: since it cannot be in process
of perishing when it is just beginning to become or after it has ceased
to become: for that which is in process of perishing must be in
existence.
Fourthly, there must be a substrate underlying all processes of
becoming and changing. What can this be in the present case? It is either
the body or the soul that undergoes alteration: what is it that correspondingly
becomes motion or becoming? And again what is the goal of their motion?
It must be the motion or becoming of something from something to something
else. But in what sense can this be so? For the becoming of learning cannot
be learning: so neither can the becoming of becoming be becoming, nor can
the becoming of any process be that process.
Finally, since there are three kinds of motion, the substratum
and the goal of motion must be one or other of these, e.g. locomotion will
have to be altered or to be locally moved.
To sum up, then, since everything that is moved is moved in one
of three ways, either accidentally, or partially, or essentially, change
can change only accidentally, as e.g. when a man who is being restored
to health runs or learns: and accidental change we have long ago decided
to leave out of account.
Since, then, motion can belong neither to Being nor to Relation
nor to Agent and Patient, it remains that there can be motion only in respect
of Quality, Quantity, and Place: for with each of these we have a pair
of contraries. Motion in respect of Quality let us call alteration, a general
designation that is used to include both contraries: and by Quality I do
not here mean a property of substance (in that sense that which constitutes
a specific distinction is a quality) but a passive quality in virtue of
which a thing is said to be acted on or to be incapable of being acted
on. Motion in respect of Quantity has no name that includes both contraries,
but it is called increase or decrease according as one or the other is
designated: that is to say motion in the direction of complete magnitude
is increase, motion in the contrary direction is decrease. Motion in respect
of Place has no name either general or particular: but we may designate
it by the general name of locomotion, though strictly the term 'locomotion'
is applicable to things that change their place only when they have not
the power to come to a stand, and to things that do not move themselves
locally.
Change within the same kind from a lesser to a greater or from
a greater to a lesser degree is alteration: for it is motion either from
a contrary or to a contrary, whether in an unqualified or in a qualified
sense: for change to a lesser degree of a quality will be called change
to the contrary of that quality, and change to a greater degree of a quality
will be regarded as change from the contrary of that quality to the quality
itself. It makes no difference whether the change be qualified or unqualified,
except that in the former case the contraries will have to be contrary
to one another only in a qualified sense: and a thing's possessing a quality
in a greater or in a lesser degree means the presence or absence in it
of more or less of the opposite quality. It is now clear, then, that there
are only these three kinds of motion.
The term 'immovable' we apply in the first place to that which
is absolutely incapable of being moved (just as we correspondingly apply
the term invisible to sound); in the second place to that which is moved
with difficulty after a long time or whose movement is slow at the start-in
fact, what we describe as hard to move; and in the third place to that
which is naturally designed for and capable of motion, but is not in motion
when, where, and as it naturally would be so. This last is the only kind
of immovable thing of which I use the term 'being at rest': for rest is
contrary to motion, so that rest will be negation of motion in that which
is capable of admitting motion.
The foregoing remarks are sufficient to explain the essential nature
of motion and rest, the number of kinds of change, and the different varieties
of motion.
Part 3
Let us now proceed to define the terms 'together' and 'apart',
'in contact', 'between', 'in succession', 'contiguous', and 'continuous',
and to show in what circumstances each of these terms is naturally
applicable.
Things are said to be together in place when they are in one place
(in the strictest sense of the word 'place') and to be apart when they
are in different places.
Things are said to be in contact when their extremities are
together.
That which a changing thing, if it changes continuously in a natural
manner, naturally reaches before it reaches that to which it changes last,
is between. Thus 'between' implies the presence of at least three things:
for in a process of change it is the contrary that is 'last': and a thing
is moved continuously if it leaves no gap or only the smallest possible
gap in the material-not in the time (for a gap in the time does not prevent
things having a 'between', while, on the other hand, there is nothing to
prevent the highest note sounding immediately after the lowest) but in
the material in which the motion takes place. This is manifestly true not
only in local changes but in every other kind as well. (Now every change
implies a pair of opposites, and opposites may be either contraries or
contradictories; since then contradiction admits of no mean term, it is
obvious that 'between' must imply a pair of contraries) That is locally
contrary which is most distant in a straight line: for the shortest line
is definitely limited, and that which is definitely limited constitutes
a measure.
A thing is 'in succession' when it is after the beginning in position
or in form or in some other respect in which it is definitely so regarded,
and when further there is nothing of the same kind as itself between it
and that to which it is in succession, e.g. a line or lines if it is a
line, a unit or units if it is a unit, a house if it is a house (there
is nothing to prevent something of a different kind being between). For
that which is in succession is in succession to a particular thing, and
is something posterior: for one is not 'in succession' to two, nor is the
first day of the month to be second: in each case the latter is 'in succession'
to the former.
A thing that is in succession and touches is 'contiguous'. The
'continuous' is a subdivision of the contiguous: things are called continuous
when the touching limits of each become one and the same and are, as the
word implies, contained in each other: continuity is impossible if these
extremities are two. This definition makes it plain that continuity belongs
to things that naturally in virtue of their mutual contact form a unity.
And in whatever way that which holds them together is one, so too will
the whole be one, e.g. by a rivet or glue or contact or organic
union.
It is obvious that of these terms 'in succession' is first in order
of analysis: for that which touches is necessarily in succession, but not
everything that is in succession touches: and so succession is a property
of things prior in definition, e.g. numbers, while contact is not. And
if there is continuity there is necessarily contact, but if there is contact,
that alone does not imply continuity: for the extremities of things may
be 'together' without necessarily being one: but they cannot be one without
being necessarily together. So natural junction is last in coming to be:
for the extremities must necessarily come into contact if they are to be
naturally joined: but things that are in contact are not all naturally
joined, while there is no contact clearly there is no natural junction
either. Hence, if as some say 'point' and 'unit' have an independent existence
of their own, it is impossible for the two to be identical: for points
can touch while units can only be in succession. Moreover, there can always
be something between points (for all lines are intermediate between points),
whereas it is not necessary that there should possibly be anything between
units: for there can be nothing between the numbers one and
two.
We have now defined what is meant by 'together' and 'apart', 'contact',
'between' and 'in succession', 'contiguous' and 'continuous': and we have
shown in what circumstances each of these terms is applicable.
Part 4
There are many senses in which motion is said to be 'one': for
we use the term 'one' in many senses.
Motion is one generically according to the different categories
to which it may be assigned: thus any locomotion is one generically with
any other locomotion, whereas alteration is different generically from
locomotion.
Motion is one specifically when besides being one generically it
also takes place in a species incapable of subdivision: e.g. colour has
specific differences: therefore blackening and whitening differ specifically;
but at all events every whitening will be specifically the same with every
other whitening and every blackening with every other blackening. But white
is not further subdivided by specific differences: hence any whitening
is specifically one with any other whitening. Where it happens that the
genus is at the same time a species, it is clear that the motion will then
in a sense be one specifically though not in an unqualified sense: learning
is an example of this, knowledge being on the one hand a species of apprehension
and on the other hand a genus including the various knowledges. A difficulty,
however, may be raised as to whether a motion is specifically one when
the same thing changes from the same to the same, e.g. when one point changes
again and again from a particular place to a particular place: if this
motion is specifically one, circular motion will be the same as rectilinear
motion, and rolling the same as walking. But is not this difficulty removed
by the principle already laid down that if that in which the motion takes
place is specifically different (as in the present instance the circular
path is specifically different from the straight) the motion itself is
also different? We have explained, then, what is meant by saying that motion
is one generically or one specifically.
Motion is one in an unqualified sense when it is one essentially
or numerically: and the following distinctions will make clear what this
kind of motion is. There are three classes of things in connexion with
which we speak of motion, the 'that which', the 'that in which', and the
'that during which'. I mean that there must he something that is in motion,
e.g. a man or gold, and it must be in motion in something, e.g. a place
or an affection, and during something, for all motion takes place during
a time. Of these three it is the thing in which the motion takes place
that makes it one generically or specifically, it is the thing moved that
makes the motion one in subject, and it is the time that makes it consecutive:
but it is the three together that make it one without qualification: to
effect this, that in which the motion takes place (the species) must be
one and incapable of subdivision, that during which it takes place (the
time) must be one and unintermittent, and that which is in motion must
be one-not in an accidental sense (i.e. it must be one as the white that
blackens is one or Coriscus who walks is one, not in the accidental sense
in which Coriscus and white may be one), nor merely in virtue of community
of nature (for there might be a case of two men being restored to health
at the same time in the same way, e.g. from inflammation of the eye, yet
this motion is not really one, but only specifically
one).
Suppose, however, that Socrates undergoes an alteration specifically
the same but at one time and again at another: in this case if it is possible
for that which ceased to be again to come into being and remain numerically
the same, then this motion too will be one: otherwise it will be the same
but not one. And akin to this difficulty there is another; viz. is health
one? and generally are the states and affections in bodies severally one
in essence although (as is clear) the things that contain them are obviously
in motion and in flux? Thus if a person's health at daybreak and at the
present moment is one and the same, why should not this health be numerically
one with that which he recovers after an interval? The same argument applies
in each case. There is, however, we may answer, this difference: that if
the states are two then it follows simply from this fact that the activities
must also in point of number be two (for only that which is numerically
one can give rise to an activity that is numerically one), but if the state
is one, this is not in itself enough to make us regard the activity also
as one: for when a man ceases walking, the walking no longer is, but it
will again be if he begins to walk again. But, be this as it may, if in
the above instance the health is one and the same, then it must be possible
for that which is one and the same to come to be and to cease to be many
times. However, these difficulties lie outside our present
inquiry.
Since every motion is continuous, a motion that is one in an unqualified
sense must (since every motion is divisible) be continuous, and a continuous
motion must be one. There will not be continuity between any motion and
any other indiscriminately any more than there is between any two things
chosen at random in any other sphere: there can be continuity only when
the extremities of the two things are one. Now some things have no extremities
at all: and the extremities of others differ specifically although we give
them the same name of 'end': how should e.g. the 'end' of a line and the
'end' of walking touch or come to be one? Motions that are not the same
either specifically or generically may, it is true, be consecutive (e.g.
a man may run and then at once fall ill of a fever), and again, in the
torch-race we have consecutive but not continuous locomotion: for according
to our definition there can be continuity only when the ends of the two
things are one. Hence motions may be consecutive or successive in virtue
of the time being continuous, but there can be continuity only in virtue
of the motions themselves being continuous, that is when the end of each
is one with the end of the other. Motion, therefore, that is in an unqualified
sense continuous and one must be specifically the same, of one thing, and
in one time. Unity is required in respect of time in order that there may
be no interval of immobility, for where there is intermission of motion
there must be rest, and a motion that includes intervals of rest will be
not one but many, so that a motion that is interrupted by stationariness
is not one or continuous, and it is so interrupted if there is an interval
of time. And though of a motion that is not specifically one (even if the
time is unintermittent) the time is one, the motion is specifically different,
and so cannot really be one, for motion that is one must be specifically
one, though motion that is specifically one is not necessarily one in an
unqualified sense. We have now explained what we mean when we call a motion
one without qualification.
Further, a motion is also said to be one generically, specifically,
or essentially when it is complete, just as in other cases completeness
and wholeness are characteristics of what is one: and sometimes a motion
even if incomplete is said to be one, provided only that it is
continuous.
And besides the cases already mentioned there is another in which
a motion is said to be one, viz. when it is regular: for in a sense a motion
that is irregular is not regarded as one, that title belonging rather to
that which is regular, as a straight line is regular, the irregular being
as such divisible. But the difference would seem to be one of degree. In
every kind of motion we may have regularity or irregularity: thus there
may be regular alteration, and locomotion in a regular path, e.g. in a
circle or on a straight line, and it is the same with regard to increase
and decrease. The difference that makes a motion irregular is sometimes
to be found in its path: thus a motion cannot be regular if its path is
an irregular magnitude, e.g. a broken line, a spiral, or any other magnitude
that is not such that any part of it taken at random fits on to any other
that may be chosen. Sometimes it is found neither in the place nor in the
time nor in the goal but in the manner of the motion: for in some cases
the motion is differentiated by quickness and slowness: thus if its velocity
is uniform a motion is regular, if not it is irregular. So quickness and
slowness are not species of motion nor do they constitute specific differences
of motion, because this distinction occurs in connexion with all the distinct
species of motion. The same is true of heaviness and lightness when they
refer to the same thing: e.g. they do not specifically distinguish earth
from itself or fire from itself. Irregular motion, therefore, while in
virtue of being continuous it is one, is so in a lesser degree, as is the
case with locomotion in a broken line: and a lesser degree of something
always means an admixture of its contrary. And since every motion that
is one can be both regular and irregular, motions that are consecutive
but not specifically the same cannot be one and continuous: for how should
a motion composed of alteration and locomotion be regular? If a motion
is to be regular its parts ought to fit one another.
Part 5
We have further to determine what motions are contrary to each
other, and to determine similarly how it is with rest. And we have first
to decide whether contrary motions are motions respectively from and to
the same thing, e.g. a motion from health and a motion to health (where
the opposition, it would seem, is of the same kind as that between coming
to be and ceasing to be); or motions respectively from contraries, e.g.
a motion from health and a motion from disease; or motions respectively
to contraries, e.g. a motion to health and a motion to disease; or motions
respectively from a contrary and to the opposite contrary, e.g. a motion
from health and a motion to disease; or motions respectively from a contrary
to the opposite contrary and from the latter to the former, e.g. a motion
from health to disease and a motion from disease to health: for motions
must be contrary to one another in one or more of these ways, as there
is no other way in which they can be opposed.
Now motions respectively from a contrary and to the opposite contrary,
e.g. a motion from health and a motion to disease, are not contrary motions:
for they are one and the same. (Yet their essence is not the same, just
as changing from health is different from changing to disease.) Nor are
motion respectively from a contrary and from the opposite contrary contrary
motions, for a motion from a contrary is at the same time a motion to a
contrary or to an intermediate (of this, however, we shall speak later),
but changing to a contrary rather than changing from a contrary would seem
to be the cause of the contrariety of motions, the latter being the loss,
the former the gain, of contrariness. Moreover, each several motion takes
its name rather from the goal than from the starting-point of change, e.g.
motion to health we call convalescence, motion to disease sickening. Thus
we are left with motions respectively to contraries, and motions respectively
to contraries from the opposite contraries. Now it would seem that motions
to contraries are at the same time motions from contraries (though their
essence may not be the same; 'to health' is distinct, I mean, from 'from
disease', and 'from health' from 'to disease').
Since then change differs from motion (motion being change from
a particular subject to a particular subject), it follows that contrary
motions are motions respectively from a contrary to the opposite contrary
and from the latter to the former, e.g. a motion from health to disease
and a motion from disease to health. Moreover, the consideration of particular
examples will also show what kinds of processes are generally recognized
as contrary: thus falling ill is regarded as contrary to recovering one's
health, these processes having contrary goals, and being taught as contrary
to being led into error by another, it being possible to acquire error,
like knowledge, either by one's own agency or by that of another. Similarly
we have upward locomotion and downward locomotion, which are contrary lengthwise,
locomotion to the right and locomotion to the left, which are contrary
breadthwise, and forward locomotion and backward locomotion, which too
are contraries. On the other hand, a process simply to a contrary, e.g.
that denoted by the expression 'becoming white', where no starting-point
is specified, is a change but not a motion. And in all cases of a thing
that has no contrary we have as contraries change from and change to the
same thing. Thus coming to be is contrary to ceasing to be, and losing
to gaining. But these are changes and not motions. And wherever a pair
of contraries admit of an intermediate, motions to that intermediate must
be held to be in a sense motions to one or other of the contraries: for
the intermediate serves as a contrary for the purposes of the motion, in
whichever direction the change may be, e.g. grey in a motion from grey
to white takes the place of black as starting-point, in a motion from white
to grey it takes the place of black as goal, and in a motion from black
to grey it takes the place of white as goal: for the middle is opposed
in a sense to either of the extremes, as has been said above. Thus we see
that two motions are contrary to each other only when one is a motion from
a contrary to the opposite contrary and the other is a motion from the
latter to the former.
Part 6
But since a motion appears to have contrary to it not only another
motion but also a state of rest, we must determine how this is so. A motion
has for its contrary in the strict sense of the term another motion, but
it also has for an opposite a state of rest (for rest is the privation
of motion and the privation of anything may be called its contrary), and
motion of one kind has for its opposite rest of that kind, e.g. local motion
has local rest. This statement, however, needs further qualification: there
remains the question, is the opposite of remaining at a particular place
motion from or motion to that place? It is surely clear that since there
are two subjects between which motion takes place, motion from one of these
(A) to its contrary (B) has for its opposite remaining in A while the reverse
motion has for its opposite remaining in B. At the same time these two
are also contrary to each other: for it would be absurd to suppose that
there are contrary motions and not opposite states of rest. States of rest
in contraries are opposed. To take an example, a state of rest in health
is (1) contrary to a state of rest in disease, and (2) the motion to which
it is contrary is that from health to disease. For (2) it would be absurd
that its contrary motion should be that from disease to health, since motion
to that in which a thing is at rest is rather a coming to rest, the coming
to rest being found to come into being simultaneously with the motion;
and one of these two motions it must be. And (1) rest in whiteness is of
course not contrary to rest in health.
Of all things that have no contraries there are opposite changes
(viz. change from the thing and change to the thing, e.g. change from being
and change to being), but no motion. So, too, of such things there is no
remaining though there is absence of change. Should there be a particular
subject, absence of change in its being will be contrary to absence of
change in its not-being. And here a difficulty may be raised: if not-being
is not a particular something, what is it, it may be asked, that is contrary
to absence of change in a thing's being? and is this absence of change
a state of rest? If it is, then either it is not true that every state
of rest is contrary to a motion or else coming to be and ceasing to be
are motion. It is clear then that, since we exclude these from among motions,
we must not say that this absence of change is a state of rest: we must
say that it is similar to a state of rest and call it absence of change.
And it will have for its contrary either nothing or absence of change in
the thing's not-being, or the ceasing to be of the thing: for such ceasing
to be is change from it and the thing's coming to be is change to
it.
Again, a further difficulty may be raised. How is it, it may be
asked, that whereas in local change both remaining and moving may be natural
or unnatural, in the other changes this is not so? e.g. alteration is not
now natural and now unnatural, for convalescence is no more natural or
unnatural than falling ill, whitening no more natural or unnatural than
blackening; so, too, with increase and decrease: these are not contrary
to each other in the sense that either of them is natural while the other
is unnatural, nor is one increase contrary to another in this sense; and
the same account may be given of becoming and perishing: it is not true
that becoming is natural and perishing unnatural (for growing old is natural),
nor do we observe one becoming to be natural and another unnatural. We
answer that if what happens under violence is unnatural, then violent perishing
is unnatural and as such contrary to natural perishing. Are there then
also some becomings that are violent and not the result of natural necessity,
and are therefore contrary to natural becomings, and violent increases
and decreases, e.g. the rapid growth to maturity of profligates and the
rapid ripening of seeds even when not packed close in the earth? And how
is it with alterations? Surely just the same: we may say that some alterations
are violent while others are natural, e.g. patients alter naturally or
unnaturally according as they throw off fevers on the critical days or
not. But, it may be objected, then we shall have perishings contrary to
one another, not to becoming. Certainly: and why should not this in a sense
be so? Thus it is so if one perishing is pleasant and another painful:
and so one perishing will be contrary to another not in an unqualified
sense, but in so far as one has this quality and the other
that.
Now motions and states of rest universally exhibit contrariety
in the manner described above, e.g. upward motion and rest above are respectively
contrary to downward motion and rest below, these being instances of local
contrariety; and upward locomotion belongs naturally to fire and downward
to earth, i.e. the locomotions of the two are contrary to each other. And
again, fire moves up naturally and down unnaturally: and its natural motion
is certainly contrary to its unnatural motion. Similarly with remaining:
remaining above is contrary to motion from above downwards, and to earth
this remaining comes unnaturally, this motion naturally. So the unnatural
remaining of a thing is contrary to its natural motion, just as we find
a similar contrariety in the motion of the same thing: one of its motions,
the upward or the downward, will be natural, the other
unnatural.
Here, however, the question arises, has every state of rest that
is not permanent a becoming, and is this becoming a coming to a standstill?
If so, there must be a becoming of that which is at rest unnaturally, e.g.
of earth at rest above: and therefore this earth during the time that it
was being carried violently upward was coming to a standstill. But whereas
the velocity of that which comes to a standstill seems always to increase,
the velocity of that which is carried violently seems always to decrease:
so it will he in a state of rest without having become so. Moreover 'coming
to a standstill' is generally recognized to be identical or at least concomitant
with the locomotion of a thing to its proper place.
There is also another difficulty involved in the view that remaining
in a particular place is contrary to motion from that place. For when a
thing is moving from or discarding something, it still appears to have
that which is being discarded, so that if a state of rest is itself contrary
to the motion from the state of rest to its contrary, the contraries rest
and motion will be simultaneously predicable of the same thing. May we
not say, however, that in so far as the thing is still stationary it is
in a state of rest in a qualified sense? For, in fact, whenever a thing
is in motion, part of it is at the starting-point while part is at the
goal to which it is changing: and consequently a motion finds its true
contrary rather in another motion than in a state of
rest.
With regard to motion and rest, then, we have now explained in
what sense each of them is one and under what conditions they exhibit
contrariety.
[With regard to coming to a standstill the question may be raised
whether there is an opposite state of rest to unnatural as well as to natural
motions. It would be absurd if this were not the case: for a thing may
remain still merely under violence: thus we shall have a thing being in
a non-permanent state of rest without having become so. But it is clear
that it must be the case: for just as there is unnatural motion, so, too,
a thing may be in an unnatural state of rest. Further, some things have
a natural and an unnatural motion, e.g. fire has a natural upward motion
and an unnatural downward motion: is it, then, this unnatural downward
motion or is it the natural downward motion of earth that is contrary to
the natural upward motion? Surely it is clear that both are contrary to
it though not in the same sense: the natural motion of earth is contrary
inasmuch as the motion of fire is also natural, whereas the upward motion
of fire as being natural is contrary to the downward motion of fire as
being unnatural. The same is true of the corresponding cases of remaining.
But there would seem to be a sense in which a state of rest and a motion
are opposites.]