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1109 lines
60 KiB
Plaintext
1109 lines
60 KiB
Plaintext
350 BC
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ON YOUTH AND OLD AGE, ON LIFE AND DEATH,
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ON BREATHING
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by Aristotle
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translated by G. R. T. Ross
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1
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WE must now treat of youth and old age and life and death. We must
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probably also at the same time state the causes of respiration as
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well, since in some cases living and the reverse depend on this.
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We have elsewhere given a precise account of the soul, and while
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it is clear that its essential reality cannot be corporeal, yet
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manifestly it must exist in some bodily part which must be one of
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those possessing control over the members. Let us for the present
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set aside the other divisions or faculties of the soul (whichever of
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the two be the correct name). But as to being what is called an animal
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and a living thing, we find that in all beings endowed with both
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characteristics (viz. being an animal and being alive) there must be a
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single identical part in virtue of which they live and are called
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animals; for an animal qua animal cannot avoid being alive. But a
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thing need not, though alive, be animal, for plants live without
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having sensation, and it is by sensation that we distinguish animal
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from what is not animal.
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This organ, then, must be numerically one and the same and yet
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possess multiple and disparate aspects, for being animal and living
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are not identical. Since then the organs of special sensation have one
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common organ in which the senses when functioning must meet, and
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this must be situated midway between what is called before and
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behind (we call 'before' the direction from which sensation comes,
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'behind' the opposite), further, since in all living things the body
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is divided into upper and lower (they all have upper and lower
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parts, so that this is true of plants as well), clearly the
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nutritive principle must be situated midway between these regions.
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That part where food enters we call upper, considering it by itself
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and not relatively to the surrounding universe, while downward is that
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part by which the primary excrement is discharged.
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Plants are the reverse of animals in this respect. To man in
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particular among the animals, on account of his erect stature, belongs
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the characteristic of having his upper parts pointing upwards in the
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sense in which that applies to the universe, while in the others these
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are in an intermediate position. But in plants, owing to their being
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stationary and drawing their sustenance from the ground, the upper
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part must always be down; for there is a correspondence between the
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roots in a plant and what is called the mouth in animals, by means
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of which they take in their food, whether the source of supply be
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the earth or each other's bodies.
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2
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All perfectly formed animals are to be divided into three parts, one
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that by which food is taken in, one that by which excrement is
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discharged, and the third the region intermediate between them. In the
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largest animals this latter is called the chest and in the others
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something corresponding; in some also it is more distinctly marked off
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than in others. All those also that are capable of progression have
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additional members subservient to this purpose, by means of which they
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bear the whole trunk, to wit legs and feet and whatever parts are
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possessed of the same powers. Now it is evident both by observation
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and by inference that the source of the nutritive soul is in the midst
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of the three parts. For many animals, when either part-the head or the
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receptacle of the food-is cut off, retain life in that member to which
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the middle remains attached. This can be seen to occur in many
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insects, e.g. wasps and bees, and many animals also besides insects
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can, though divided, continue to live by means of the part connected
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with nutrition.
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While this member is indeed in actuality single, yet potentially
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it is multiple, for these animals have a constitution similar to
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that of Plants; plants when cut into sections continue to live, and
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a number of trees can be derived from one single source. A separate
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account will be given of the reason why some plants cannot live when
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divided, while others can be propagated by the taking of slips. In
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this respect, however, plants and insects are alike.
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It is true that the nutritive soul, in beings possessing it, while
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actually single must be potentially plural. And it is too with the
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principle of sensation, for evidently the divided segments of these
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animals have sensation. They are unable, however, to preserve their
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constitution, as plants can, not possessing the organs on which the
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continuance of life depends, for some lack the means for seizing,
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others for receiving their food; or again they may be destitute of
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other organs as well.
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Divisible animals are like a number of animals grown together, but
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animals of superior construction behave differently because their
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constitution is a unity of the highest possible kind. Hence some of
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the organs on division display slight sensitiveness because they
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retain some psychical susceptibility; the animals continue to move
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after the vitals have been abstracted: tortoises, for example, do so
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even after the heart has been removed.
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3
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The same phenomenon is evident both in plants and in animals, and in
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plants we note it both in their propagation by seed and in grafts
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and cuttings. Genesis from seeds always starts from the middle. All
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seeds are bivalvular, and the place of junction is situated at the
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point of attachment (to the plant), an intermediate part belonging
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to both halves. It is from this part that both root and stem of
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growing things emerge; the starting-point is in a central position
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between them. In the case of grafts and cuttings this is
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particularly true of the buds; for the bud is in a way the
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starting-point of the branch, but at the same time it is in a
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central position. Hence it is either this that is cut off, or into
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this that the new shoot is inserted, when we wish either a new
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branch or a new root to spring from it; which proves that the point of
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origin in growth is intermediate between stem and root.
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Likewise in sanguineous animals the heart is the first organ
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developed; this is evident from what has been observed in those
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cases where observation of their growth is possible. Hence in
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bloodless animals also what corresponds to the heart must develop
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first. We have already asserted in our treatise on The Parts of
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Animals that it is from the heart that the veins issue, and that in
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sanguineous animals the blood is the final nutriment from which the
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members are formed. Hence it is clear that there is one function in
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nutrition which the mouth has the faculty of performing, and a
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different one appertaining to the stomach. But it is the heart that
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has supreme control, exercising an additional and completing function.
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Hence in sanguineous animals the source both of the sensitive and of
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the nutritive soul must be in the heart, for the functions relative to
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nutrition exercised by the other parts are ancillary to the activity
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of the heart. It is the part of the dominating organ to achieve the
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final result, as of the physician's efforts to be directed towards
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health, and not to be occupied with subordinate offices.
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Certainly, however, all saguineous animals have the supreme organ of
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the sensefaculties in the heart, for it is here that we must look
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for the common sensorium belonging to all the sense-organs. These in
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two cases, taste and touch, can be clearly seen to extend to the
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heart, and hence the others also must lead to it, for in it the
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other organs may possibly initiate changes, whereas with the upper
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region of the body taste and touch have no connexion. Apart from these
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considerations, if the life is always located in this part,
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evidently the principle of sensation must be situated there too, for
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it is qua animal that an animal is said to be a living thing, and it
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is called animal because endowed with sensation. Elsewhere in other
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works we have stated the reasons why some of the sense-organs are,
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as is evident, connected with the heart, while others are situated
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in the head. (It is this fact that causes some people to think that it
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is in virtue of the brain that the function of perception belongs to
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animals.)
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4
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Thus if, on the one hand, we look to the observed facts, what we
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have said makes it clear that the source of the sensitive soul,
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together with that connected with growth and nutrition, is situated in
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this organ and in the central one of the three divisions of the
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body. But it follows by deduction also; for we see that in every case,
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when several results are open to her, Nature always brings to pass the
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best. Now if both principles are located in the midst of the
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substance, the two parts of the body, viz. that which elaborates and
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that which receives the nutriment in its final form will best
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perform their appropriate function; for the soul will then be close to
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each, and the central situation which it will, as such, occupy is
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the position of a dominating power.
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Further, that which employs an instrument and the instrument it
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employs must be distinct (and must be spatially diverse too, if
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possible, as in capacity), just as the flute and that which plays
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it-the hand-are diverse. Thus if animal is defined by the possession
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of sensitive soul, this soul must in the sanguineous animals be in the
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heart, and, in the bloodless ones, in the corresponding part of
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their body. But in animals all the members and the whole body
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possess some connate warmth of constitution, and hence when alive they
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are observed to be warm, but when dead and deprived of life they are
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the opposite. Indeed, the source of this warmth must be in the heart
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in sanguineous animals, and in the case of bloodless animals in the
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corresponding organ, for, though all parts of the body by means of
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their natural heat elaborate and concoct the nutriment, the
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governing organ takes the chief share in this process. Hence, though
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the other members become cold, life remains; but when the warmth
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here is quenched, death always ensues, because the source of heat in
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all the other members depends on this, and the soul is, as it were,
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set aglow with fire in this part, which in sanguineous animals is
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the heart and in the bloodless order the analogous member. Hence, of
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necessity, life must be coincident with the maintenance of heat, and
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what we call death is its destruction.
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5
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However, it is to be noticed that there are two ways in which fire
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ceases to exist; it may go out either by exhaustion or by
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extinction. That which is self-caused we call exhaustion, that due
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to its opposites extinction. [The former is that due to old age, the
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latter to violence.] But either of these ways in which fire ceases
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to be may be brought about by the same cause, for, when there is a
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deficiency of nutriment and the warmth can obtain no maintenance,
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the fire fails; and the reason is that the opposite, checking
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digestion, prevents the fire from being fed. But in other cases the
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result is exhaustion,-when the heat accumulates excessively owing to
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lack of respiration and of refrigeration. For in this case what
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happens is that the heat, accumulating in great quantity, quickly uses
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up its nutriment and consumes it all before more is sent up by
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evaporation. Hence not only is a smaller fire readily put out by a
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large one, but of itself the candle flame is consumed when inserted in
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a large blaze just as is the case with any other combustible. The
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reason is that the nutriment in the flame is seized by the larger
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one before fresh fuel can be added, for fire is ever coming into being
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and rushing just like a river, but so speedily as to elude
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observation.
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Clearly therefore, if the bodily heat must be conserved (as is
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necessary if life is to continue), there must be some way of cooling
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the heat resident in the source of warmth. Take as an illustration
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what occurs when coals are confined in a brazier. If they are kept
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covered up continuously by the so-called 'choker', they are quickly
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extinguished, but, if the lid is in rapid alternation lifted up and
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put on again they remain glowing for a long time. Banking up a fire
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also keeps it in, for the ashes, being porous, do not prevent the
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passage of air, and again they enable it to resist extinction by the
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surrounding air by means of the supply of heat which it possesses.
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However, we have stated in The Problems the reasons why these
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operations, namely banking up and covering up a fire, have the
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opposite effects (in the one case the fire goes out, in the other it
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continues alive for a considerable time).
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6
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Everything living has soul, and it, as we have said, cannot exist
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without the presence of heat in the constitution. In plants the
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natural heat is sufficiently well kept alive by the aid which their
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nutriment and the surrounding air supply. For the food has a cooling
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effect [as it enters, just as it has in man] when first it is taken
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in, whereas abstinence from food produces heat and thirst. The air, if
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it be motionless, becomes hot, but by the entry of food a motion is
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set up which lasts until digestion is completed and so cools it. If
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the surrounding air is excessively cold owing to the time of year,
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there being severe frost, plants shrivel, or if, in the extreme
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heats of summer the moisture drawn from the ground cannot produce
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its cooling effect, the heat comes to an end by exhaustion. Trees
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suffering at such seasons are said to be blighted or star-stricken.
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Hence the practice of laying beneath the roots stones of certain
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species or water in pots, for the purpose of cooling the roots of
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the plants.
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Some animals pass their life in the water, others in the air, and
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therefore these media furnish the source and means of refrigeration,
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water in the one case, air in the other. We must proceed-and it will
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require further application on our part-to give an account of the
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way and manner in which this refrigeration occurs.
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7
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A few of the previous physical philosophers have spoken of
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respiration. The reason, however, why it exists in animals they have
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either not declared or, when they have, their statements are not
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correct and show a comparative lack of acquaintance with the facts.
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Moreover they assert that all animals respire-which is untrue. Hence
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these points must first claim our attention, in order that we may
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not be thought to make unsubstantiated charges against authors no
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longer alive.
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First then, it is evident that all animals with lungs breathe, but
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in some cases breathing animals have a bloodless and spongy lung,
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and then there is less need for respiration. These animals can
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remain under water for a time, which relatively to their bodily
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strength, is considerable. All oviparous animals, e.g. the frog-tribe,
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have a spongy lung. Also hemydes and tortoises can remain for a long
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time immersed in water; for their lung, containing little blood, has
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not much heat. Hence, when once it is inflated, it itself, by means of
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its motion, produces a cooling effect and enables the animal to remain
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immersed for a long time. Suffocation, however, always ensues if the
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animal is forced to hold its breath for too long a time, for none of
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this class take in water in the way fishes do. On the other hand,
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animals which have the lung charged with blood have greater need of
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respiration on account of the amount of their heat, while none at
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all of the others which do not possess lungs breathe.
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8
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Democritus of Abdera and certain others who have treated of
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respiration, while saying nothing definite about the lungless animals,
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nevertheless seem to speak as if all breathed. But Anaxagoras and
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Diogenes both maintain that all breathe, and state the manner in which
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fishes and oysters respire. Anaxagoras says that when fishes discharge
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water through their gills, air is formed in the mouth, for there can
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be no vacuum, and that it is by drawing in this that they respire.
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Diogenes' statement is that, when they discharge water through their
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gills, they suck the air out of the water surrounding the mouth by
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means of the vacuum formed in the mouth, for he believes there is
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air in the water.
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But these theories are untenable. Firstly, they state only what is
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the common element in both operations and so leave out the half of the
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matter. For what goes by the name of respiration consists, on the
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one hand, of inhalation, and, on the other, of the exhalation of
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breath; but, about the latter they say nothing, nor do they describe
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how such animals emit their breath. Indeed, explanation is for them
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impossible for, when the creatures respire, they must discharge
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their breath by the same passage as that by which they draw it in, and
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this must happen in alternation. Hence, as a result, they must take
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the water into their mouth at the same time as they breathe out. But
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the air and the water must meet and obstruct each other. Further, when
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they discharge the water they must emit their breath by the mouth or
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the gills, and the result will be that they will breathe in and
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breathe out at the same time, for it is at that moment that
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respiration is said to occur. But it is impossible that they should do
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both at the same time. Hence, if respiring creatures must both
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exhale and inhale the air, and if none of these animals can breathe
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out, evidently none can respire at all.
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9
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Further, the assertion that they draw in air out of the mouth or out
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of the water by means of the mouth is an impossibility, for, not
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having a lung, they have no windpipe; rather the stomach is closely
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juxtaposed to the mouth, so that they must do the sucking with the
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stomach. But in that case the other animals would do so also, which is
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not the truth; and the water-animals also would be seen to do it
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when out of the water, whereas quite evidently they do not. Further,
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in all animals that respire and draw breath there is to be observed
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a certain motion in the part of the body which draws in the air, but
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in the fishes this does not occur. Fishes do not appear to move any of
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the parts in the region of the stomach, except the gills alone, and
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these move both when they are in the water and when they are thrown on
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to dry land and gasp. Moreover, always when respiring animals are
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killed by being suffocated in water, bubbles are formed of the air
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which is forcibly discharged, as happens, e.g. when one forces a
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tortoise or a frog or any other animal of a similar class to stay
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beneath water. But with fishes this result never occurs, in whatsoever
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way we try to obtain it, since they do not contain air drawn from an
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external source. Again, the manner of respiration said to exist in
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them might occur in the case of men also when they are under water.
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For if fishes draw in air out of the surrounding water by means of
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their mouth why should not men too and other animals do so also;
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they should also, in the same way as fishes, draw in air out of the
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mouth. If in the former case it were possible, so also should it be in
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the latter. But, since in the one it is not so, neither does it
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occur in the other. Furthermore, why do fishes, if they respire, die
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in the air and gasp (as can be seen) as in suffocation? It is not want
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of food that produces this effect upon them, and the reason given by
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Diogenes is foolish, for he says that in air they take in too much air
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and hence die, but in the water they take in a moderate amount. But
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that should be a possible occurrence with land animals also; as
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facts are, however, no land animal seems to be suffocated by excessive
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respiration. Again, if all animals breathe, insects must do so also.
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many of them seem to live though divided not merely into two, but into
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several parts, e.g. the class called Scolopendra. But how can they,
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when thus divided, breathe, and what is the organ they employ? The
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main reason why these writers have not given a good account of these
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facts is that they have no acquaintance with the internal organs,
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and that they did not accept the doctrine that there is a final
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cause for whatever Nature does. If they had asked for what purpose
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respiration exists in animals, and had considered this with
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reference to the organs, e.g. the gills and the lungs, they would have
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discovered the reason more speedily.
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10
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Democritus, however, does teach that in the breathing animals
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there is a certain result produced by respiration; he asserts that
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it prevents the soul from being extruded from the body.
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Nevertheless, he by no means asserts that it is for this purpose
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that Nature so contrives it, for he, like the other physical
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philosophers, altogether fails to attain to any such explanation.
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His statement is that the soul and the hot element are identical,
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being the primary forms among the spherical particles. Hence, when
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these are being crushed together by the surrounding atmosphere
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thrusting them out, respiration, according to his account, comes in to
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succour them. For in the air there are many of those particles which
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he calls mind and soul. Hence, when we breathe and the air enters,
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these enter along with it, and by their action cancel the pressure,
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thus preventing the expulsion of the soul which resides in the animal.
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This explains why life and death are bound up with the taking in and
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letting out of the breath; for death occurs when the compression by
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the surrounding air gains the upper hand, and, the animal being unable
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to respire, the air from outside can no longer enter and counteract
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the compression. Death is the departure of those forms owing to the
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expulsive pressure exerted by the surrounding air. Death, however,
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occurs not by haphazard but, when natural, owing to old age, and, when
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unnatural, to violence.
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But the reason for this and why all must die Democritus has by no
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means made clear. And yet, since evidently death occurs at one time of
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life and not at another, he should have said whether the cause is
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external or internal. Neither does he assign the cause of the
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beginning of respiration, nor say whether it is internal or
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external. Indeed, it is not the case that the external mind
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superintends the reinforcement; rather the origin of breathing and
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of the respiratory motion must be within: it is not due to pressure
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from around. It is absurd also that what surrounds should compress and
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at the same time by entering dilate. This then is practically his
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theory, and how he puts it.
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But if we must consider that our previous account is true, and
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that respiration does not occur in every animal, we must deem that
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this explains death not universally, but only in respiring animals.
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Yet neither is it a good account of these even, as may clearly be seen
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from the facts and phenomena of which we all have experience. For in
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hot weather we grow warmer, and, having more need of respiration, we
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always breathe faster. But, when the air around is cold and
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contracts and solidifies the body, retardation of the breathing
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results. Yet this was just the time when the external air should enter
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and annul the expulsive movement, whereas it is the opposite that
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occurs. For when the breath is not let out and the heat accumulates
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too much then we need to respire, and to respire we must draw in the
|
|
breath. When hot, people breathe rapidly, because they must do so in
|
|
order to cool themselves, just when the theory of Democritus would
|
|
make them add fire to fire.
|
|
|
|
11
|
|
|
|
The theory found in the Timaeus, of the passing round of the
|
|
breath by pushing, by no means determines how, in the case of the
|
|
animals other than land-animals, their heat is preserved, and
|
|
whether it is due to the same or a different cause. For if respiration
|
|
occurs only in land-animals we should be told what is the reason of
|
|
that. Likewise, if it is found in others also, but in a different
|
|
form, this form of respiration, if they all can breathe, must also
|
|
be described.
|
|
|
|
Further, the method of explaining involves a fiction. It is said
|
|
that when the hot air issues from the mouth it pushes the
|
|
surrounding air, which being carried on enters the very place whence
|
|
the internal warmth issued, through the interstices of the porous
|
|
flesh; and this reciprocal replacement is due to the fact that a
|
|
vacuum cannot exist. But when it has become hot the air passes out
|
|
again by the same route, and pushes back inwards through the mouth the
|
|
air that had been discharged in a warm condition. It is said that it
|
|
is this action which goes on continuously when the breath is taken
|
|
in and let out.
|
|
|
|
But according to this way of thinking it will follow that we breathe
|
|
out before we breathe in. But the opposite is the case, as evidence
|
|
shows, for though these two functions go on in alternation, yet the
|
|
last act when life comes to a close is the letting out of the
|
|
breath, and hence its admission must have been the beginning of the
|
|
process.
|
|
|
|
Once more, those who give this kind of explanation by no means state
|
|
the final cause of the presence in animals of this function (to wit
|
|
the admission and emission of the breath), but treat it as though it
|
|
were a contingent accompaniment of life. Yet it evidently has
|
|
control over life and death, for it results synchronously that when
|
|
respiring animals are unable to breathe they perish. Again, it is
|
|
absurd that the passage of the hot air out through the mouth and
|
|
back again should be quite perceptible, while we were not able to
|
|
detect the thoracic influx and the return outwards once more of the
|
|
heated breath. It is also nonsense that respiration should consist
|
|
in the entrance of heat, for the evidence is to the contrary effect;
|
|
what is breathed out is hot, and what is breathed in is cold. When
|
|
it is hot we pant in breathing, for, because what enters does not
|
|
adequately perform its cooling function, we have as a consequence to
|
|
draw the breath frequently.
|
|
|
|
12
|
|
|
|
It is certain, however, that we must not entertain the notion that
|
|
it is for purposes of nutrition that respiration is designed, and
|
|
believe that the internal fire is fed by the breath; respiration, as
|
|
it were, adding fuel to the fire, while the feeding of the flame
|
|
results in the outward passage of the breath. To combat this
|
|
doctrine I shall repeat what I said in opposition to the previous
|
|
theories. This, or something analogous to it, should occur in the
|
|
other animals also (on this theory), for all possess vital heat.
|
|
Further, how are we to describe this fictitious process of the
|
|
generation of heat from the breath? Observation shows rather that it
|
|
is a product of the food. A consequence also of this theory is that
|
|
the nutriment would enter and the refuse be discharged by the same
|
|
channel, but this does not appear to occur in the other instances.
|
|
|
|
13
|
|
|
|
Empedocles also gives an account of respiration without, however,
|
|
making clear what its purpose is, or whether or not it is universal in
|
|
animals. Also when dealing with respiration by means of the nostrils
|
|
he imagines he is dealing with what is the primary kind of
|
|
respiration. Even the breath which passes through the nostrils
|
|
passes through the windpipe out of the chest as well, and without
|
|
the latter the nostrils cannot act. Again, when animals are bereft
|
|
of respiration through the nostrils, no detrimental result ensues,
|
|
but, when prevented from breathing through the windpipe, they die.
|
|
Nature employs respiration through the nostrils as a secondary
|
|
function in certain animals in order to enable them to smell. But
|
|
the reason why it exists in some only is that though almost all
|
|
animals are endowed with the sense of smell, the sense-organ is not
|
|
the same in all.
|
|
|
|
A more precise account has been given about this elsewhere.
|
|
Empedocles, however, explains the passage inwards and outwards of
|
|
the breath, by the theory that there are certain blood-vessels, which,
|
|
while containing blood, are not filled by it, but have passages
|
|
leading to the outer air, the calibre of which is fine in contrast
|
|
to the size of the solid particles, but large relatively to those in
|
|
the air. Hence, since it is the nature of the blood to move upwards
|
|
and downwards, when it moves down the air rushes in and inspiration
|
|
occurs; when the blood rises, the air is forced out and the outward
|
|
motion of the breath results. He compares this process to what
|
|
occurs in a clepsydra.
|
|
|
|
Thus all things outwards breathe and in;- their flesh has tubes
|
|
|
|
Bloodless, that stretch towards the body's outmost edge,
|
|
|
|
Which, at their mouths, full many frequent channels pierce,
|
|
|
|
Cleaving the extreme nostrils through; thus, while the gore
|
|
|
|
Lies hid, for air is cut a thoroughfare most plain.
|
|
|
|
And thence, whenever shrinks away the tender blood,
|
|
|
|
Enters the blustering wind with swelling billow wild.
|
|
|
|
But when the blood leaps up, backward it breathes. As when
|
|
|
|
With water-clock of polished bronze a maiden sporting,
|
|
|
|
Sets on her comely hand the narrow of the tube
|
|
|
|
And dips it in the frail-formed water's silvery sheen;
|
|
|
|
Not then the flood the vessel enters, but the air,
|
|
|
|
Until she frees the crowded stream. But then indeed
|
|
|
|
Upon the escape runs in the water meet.
|
|
|
|
So also when within the vessel's deeps the water
|
|
|
|
Remains, the opening by the hand of flesh being closed,
|
|
|
|
The outer air that entrance craves restrains the flood
|
|
|
|
At the gates of the sounding narrow,
|
|
|
|
upon the surface pressing,
|
|
|
|
Until the maid withdraws her hand. But then in contrariwise
|
|
|
|
Once more the air comes in and water meet flows out.
|
|
|
|
Thus to the to the subtle blood, surging throughout the limbs,
|
|
|
|
Whene'er it shrinks away into the far recesses
|
|
|
|
Admits a stream of air rushing with swelling wave,
|
|
|
|
But, when it backward leaps, in like bulk air flows out.
|
|
|
|
This then is what he says of respiration. But, as we said, all
|
|
animals that evidently respire do so by means of the windpipe, when
|
|
they breathe either through the mouth or through the nostrils.
|
|
Hence, if it is of this kind of respiration that he is talking, we
|
|
must ask how it tallies with the explanation given. But the facts seem
|
|
to be quite opposed. The chest is raised in the manner of a
|
|
forge-bellows when the breath is drawn in-it is quite reasonable
|
|
that it should be heat which raises up and that the blood should
|
|
occupy the hot region-but it collapses and sinks down, like the
|
|
bellows once more, when the breath is let out. The difference is
|
|
that in a bellows it is not by the same channel that the air is
|
|
taken in and let out, but in breathing it is.
|
|
|
|
But, if Empedocles is accounting only for respiration through the
|
|
nostrils, he is much in error, for that does not involve the
|
|
nostrils alone, but passes by the channel beside the uvula where the
|
|
extremity of the roof of the mouth is, some of the air going this
|
|
way through the apertures of the nostrils and some through the
|
|
mouth, both when it enters and when it passes out. Such then is the
|
|
nature and magnitude of the difficulties besetting the theories of
|
|
other writers concerning
|
|
respiration.
|
|
|
|
14
|
|
|
|
We have already stated that life and the presence of soul involve
|
|
a certain heat. Not even the digesting process to which is due the
|
|
nutrition of animals occurs apart from soul and warmth, for it is to
|
|
fire that in all cases elaboration is due. It is for this reason,
|
|
precisely, that the primary nutritive soul also must be located in
|
|
that part of the body and in that division of this region which is the
|
|
immediate vehicle of this principle. The region in question is
|
|
intermediate between that where food enters and that where excrement
|
|
is discharged. In bloodless animals it has no name, but in the
|
|
sanguineous class this organ is called the heart. The blood
|
|
constitutes the nutriment from which the organs of the animal are
|
|
directly formed. Likewise the bloodvessels must have the same
|
|
originating source, since the one exists for the other's behoof-as a
|
|
vessel or receptacle for it. In sanguineous animals the heart is the
|
|
starting-point of the veins; they do not traverse it, but are found to
|
|
stretch out from it, as dissections enable us to see.
|
|
|
|
Now the other psychical faculties cannot exist apart from the
|
|
power of nutrition (the reason has already been stated in the treatise
|
|
On the Soul), and this depends on the natural fire, by the union
|
|
with which Nature has set it aglow. But fire, as we have already
|
|
stated, is destroyed in two ways, either by extinction or by
|
|
exhaustion. It suffers extinction from its opposites. Hence it can
|
|
be extinguished by the surrounding cold both when in mass and
|
|
(though more speedily) when scattered. Now this way of perishing is
|
|
due to violence equally in living and in lifeless objects, for the
|
|
division of an animal by instruments and consequent congelation by
|
|
excess of cold cause death. But exhaustion is due to excess of heat;
|
|
if there is too much heat close at hand and the thing burning does not
|
|
have a fresh supply of fuel added to it, it goes out by exhaustion,
|
|
not by the action of cold. Hence, if it is going to continue it must
|
|
be cooled, for cold is a preventive against this form of extinction.
|
|
|
|
15
|
|
|
|
Some animals occupy the water, others live on land, and, that being
|
|
so, in the case of those which are very small and bloodless the
|
|
refrigeration due to the surrounding water or air is sufficient to
|
|
prevent destruction from this cause. Having little heat, they
|
|
require little cold to combat it. Hence too such animals are almost
|
|
all short-lived, for, being small, they have less scope for deflection
|
|
towards either extreme. But some insects are longer-lived though
|
|
bloodless, like all the others), and these have a deep indentation
|
|
beneath the waist, in order to secure cooling through the membrane,
|
|
which there is thinner. They are warmer animals and hence require more
|
|
refrigeration, and such are bees (some of which live as long as
|
|
seven years) and all that make a humming noise, like wasps,
|
|
cockchafers, and crickets. They make a sound as if of panting by means
|
|
of air, for, in the middle section itself, the air which exists
|
|
internally and is involved in their construction, causing a rising and
|
|
falling movement, produces friction against the membrane. The way in
|
|
which they move this region is like the motion due to the lungs in
|
|
animals that breathe the outer air, or to the gills in fishes. What
|
|
occurs is comparable to the suffocation of a respiring animal by
|
|
holding its mouth, for then the lung causes a heaving motion of this
|
|
kind. In the case of these animals this internal motion is not
|
|
sufficient for refrigeration, but in insects it is. It is by
|
|
friction against the membrane that they produce the humming sound,
|
|
as we said, in the way that children do by blowing through the holes
|
|
of a reed covered by a fine membrane. It is thus that the singing
|
|
crickets too produce their song; they possess greater warmth and are
|
|
indented at the waist, but the songless variety have no fissure there.
|
|
|
|
Animals also which are sanguineous and possess a lung, though that
|
|
contains little blood and is spongy, can in some cases, owing to the
|
|
latter fact, live a long time without breathing; for the lung,
|
|
containing little blood or fluid, can rise a long way: its own
|
|
motion can for a long time produce sufficient refrigeration. But at
|
|
last it ceases to suffice, and the animal dies of suffocation if it
|
|
does not respire-as we have already said. For of exhaustion that
|
|
kind which is destruction due to lack of refrigeration is called
|
|
suffocation, and whatsoever is thus destroyed is said to be
|
|
suffocated.
|
|
|
|
We have already stated that among animals insects do not respire,
|
|
and the fact is open to observation in the case of even small
|
|
creatures like flies and bees, for they can swim about in a fluid
|
|
for a long time if it is not too hot or too cold. Yet animals with
|
|
little strength tend to breathe more frequently. These, however, die
|
|
of what is called suffocation when the stomach becomes filled and
|
|
the heat in the central segment is destroyed. This explains also why
|
|
they revive after being among ashes for a time.
|
|
|
|
Again among water-animals those that are bloodless remain alive
|
|
longer in air than those that have blood and admit the sea-water,
|
|
as, for example, fishes. Since it is a small quantity of heat they
|
|
possess, the air is for a long time adequate for the purposes of
|
|
refrigeration in such animals as the crustacea and the polyps. It does
|
|
not however suffice, owing to their want of heat, to keep them finally
|
|
in life, for most fishes also live though among earth, yet in a
|
|
motionless state, and are to be found by digging. For all animals that
|
|
have no lung at all or have a bloodless one require less
|
|
refrigeration.
|
|
|
|
16
|
|
|
|
Concerning the bloodless animals we have declared that in some cases
|
|
it is the surrounding air, in others fluid, that aids the
|
|
maintenance of life. But in the case of animals possessing blood and
|
|
heart, all which have a lung admit the air and produce the cooling
|
|
effect by breathing in and out. All animals have a lung that are
|
|
viviparous and are so internally, not externally merely (the
|
|
Selachia are viviparous, but not internally), and of the oviparous
|
|
class those that have wings, e.g. birds, and those with scales, e.g.
|
|
tortoises, lizards, and snakes. The former class have a lung charged
|
|
with blood, but in the most part of the latter it is spongy. Hence
|
|
they employ respiration more sparingly as already said. The function
|
|
is found also in all that frequent and pass their life in the water,
|
|
e.g. the class of water-snakes and frogs and crocodiles and hemydes,
|
|
both sea- and land-tortoises, and seals.
|
|
|
|
All these and similar animals both bring forth on land and sleep
|
|
on shore or, when they do so in the water, keep the head above the
|
|
surface in order to respire. But all with gills produce
|
|
refrigeration by taking in water; the Selachia and all other
|
|
footless animals have gills. Fish are footless, and the limbs they
|
|
have get their name (pterugion) from their similarity to wings
|
|
(pterux). But of those with feet one only, so far as observed, has
|
|
gills. It is called the tadpole.
|
|
|
|
No animal yet has been seen to possess both lungs and gills, and the
|
|
reason for this is that the lung is designed for the purpose of
|
|
refrigeration by means of the air (it seems to have derived its name
|
|
(pneumon) from its function as a receptacle of the breath (pneuma)),
|
|
while gills are relevant to refrigeration by water. Now for one
|
|
purpose one organ is adapted and one single means of refrigeration
|
|
is sufficient in every case. Hence, since we see that Nature does
|
|
nothing in vain, and if there were two organs one would be
|
|
purposeless, this is the reason why some animals have gills, others
|
|
lungs, but none possess both.
|
|
|
|
17
|
|
|
|
Every animal in order to exist requires nutriment, in order to
|
|
prevent itself from dying, refrigeration; and so Nature employs the
|
|
same organ for both purposes. For, as in some cases the tongue
|
|
serves both for discerning tastes and for speech, so in animals with
|
|
lungs the mouth is employed both in working up the food and in the
|
|
passage of the breath outwards and inwards. In lungless and
|
|
non-respiring animals it is employed in working up the food, while
|
|
in those of them that require refrigeration it is the gills that are
|
|
created for this purpose.
|
|
|
|
We shall state further on how it is that these organs have the
|
|
faculty of producing refrigeration. But to prevent their food from
|
|
impeding these operations there is a similar contrivance in the
|
|
respiring animals and in those that admit water. At the moment of
|
|
respiration they do not take in food, for otherwise suffocation
|
|
results owing to the food, whether liquid or dry, slipping in
|
|
through the windpipe and lying on the lung. The windpipe is situated
|
|
before the oesophagus, through which food passes into what is called
|
|
the stomach, but in quadrupeds which are sanguineous there is, as it
|
|
were, a lid over the windpipe-the epiglottis. In birds and oviparous
|
|
quadrupeds this covering is absent, but its office is discharged by
|
|
a contraction of the windpipe. The latter class contract the
|
|
windpipe when swallowing their food; the former close down the
|
|
epiglottis. When the food has passed, the epiglottis is in the one
|
|
case raised, and in the other the windpipe is expanded, and the air
|
|
enters to effect refrigeration. In animals with gills the water is
|
|
first discharged through them and then the food passes in through
|
|
the mouth; they have no windpipe and hence can take no harm from
|
|
liquid lodging in this organ, only from its entering the stomach.
|
|
For these reasons the expulsion of water and the seizing of their food
|
|
is rapid, and their teeth are sharp and in almost all cases arranged
|
|
in a saw-like fashion, for they are debarred from chewing their food.
|
|
|
|
18
|
|
|
|
Among water-animals the cetaceans may give rise to some
|
|
perplexity, though they too can be rationally explained.
|
|
|
|
Examples of such animals are dolphins and whales, and all others
|
|
that have a blowhole. They have no feet, yet possess a lung though
|
|
admitting the sea-water. The reason for possessing a lung is that
|
|
which we have now stated [refrigeration]; the admission of water is
|
|
not for the purpose of refrigeration. That is effected by respiration,
|
|
for they have a lung. Hence they sleep with their head out of the
|
|
water, and dolphins, at any rate, snore. Further, if they are
|
|
entangled in nets they soon die of suffocation owing to lack of
|
|
respiration, and hence they can be seen to come to the surface owing
|
|
to the necessity of breathing. But, since they have to feed in the
|
|
water, they must admit it, and it is in order to discharge this that
|
|
they all have a blow-hole; after admitting the water they expel it
|
|
through the blow-hole as the fishes do through the gills. The position
|
|
of the blow-hole is an indication of this, for it leads to none of the
|
|
organs which are charged with blood; but it lies before the brain
|
|
and thence discharges water.
|
|
|
|
It is for the very same reason that molluscs and crustaceans admit
|
|
water-I mean such animals as Carabi and Carcini. For none of these
|
|
is refrigeration a necessity, for in every case they have little
|
|
heat and are bloodless, and hence are sufficiently cooled by the
|
|
surrounding water. But in feeding they admit water, and hence must
|
|
expel it in order to prevent its being swallowed simultaneously with
|
|
the food. Thus crustaceans, like the Carcini and Carabi, discharge
|
|
water through the folds beside their shaggy parts, while cuttlefish
|
|
and the polyps employ for this purpose the hollow above the head.
|
|
There is, however, a more precise account of these in the History of
|
|
Animals.
|
|
|
|
Thus it has been explained that the cause of the admission of the
|
|
water is refrigeration, and the fact that animals constituted for a
|
|
life in water must feed in it.
|
|
|
|
19
|
|
|
|
An account must next be given of refrigeration and the manner in
|
|
which it occurs in respiring animals and those possessed of gills.
|
|
We have already said that all animals with lungs respire. The reason
|
|
why some creatures have this organ, and why those having it need
|
|
respiration, is that the higher animals have a greater proportion of
|
|
heat, for at the same time they must have been assigned a higher
|
|
soul and they have a higher nature than plants. Hence too those with
|
|
most blood and most warmth in the lung are of greater size, and animal
|
|
in which the blood in the lung is purest and most plentiful is the
|
|
most erect, namely man; and the reason why he alone has his upper part
|
|
directed to the upper part of the universe is that he possesses such a
|
|
lung. Hence this organ as much as any other must be assigned to the
|
|
essence of the animal both in man and in other cases.
|
|
|
|
This then is the purpose of refrigeration. As for the constraining
|
|
and efficient cause, we must believe that it created animals like
|
|
this, just as it created many others also not of this constitution.
|
|
For some have a greater proportion of earth in their composition, like
|
|
plants, and others, e.g. aquatic animals, contain a larger amount of
|
|
water; while winged and terrestrial animals have an excess of air
|
|
and fire respectively. It is always in the region proper to the
|
|
element preponderating in the scheme of their constitution that things
|
|
exist.
|
|
|
|
20
|
|
|
|
Empedocles is then in error when he says that those animals which
|
|
have the most warmth and fire live in the water to counterbalance
|
|
the excess of heat in their constitution, in order that, since they
|
|
are deficient in cold and fluid, they may be kept in life by the
|
|
contrary character of the region they occupy; for water has less
|
|
heat than air. But it is wholly absurd that the water-animals should
|
|
in every case originate on dry land, and afterwards change their place
|
|
of abode to the water; for they are almost all footless. He,
|
|
however, when describing their original structure says that, though
|
|
originating on dry land, they have abandoned it and migrated to the
|
|
water. But again it is evident that they are not warmer than
|
|
land-animals, for in some cases they have no blood at all, in others
|
|
little.
|
|
|
|
The question, however, as to what sorts of animals should be
|
|
called warm and what cold, has in each special case received
|
|
consideration. Though in one respect there is reason in the
|
|
explanation which Empedocles aims at establishing, yet his account
|
|
is not correct. Excess in a bodily state is cured by a situation or
|
|
season of opposite character, but the constitution is best
|
|
maintained by an environment akin to it. There is a difference between
|
|
the material of which any animal is constituted and the states and
|
|
dispositions of that material. For example, if nature were to
|
|
constitute a thing of wax or of ice, she would not preserve it by
|
|
putting it in a hot place, for the opposing quality would quickly
|
|
destroy it, seeing that heat dissolves that which cold congeals.
|
|
Again, a thing composed of salt or nitre would not be taken and placed
|
|
in water, for fluid dissolves that of which the consistency is due
|
|
to the hot and the dry.
|
|
|
|
Hence if the fluid and the dry supply the material for all bodies,
|
|
it is reasonable that things the composition of which is due to the
|
|
fluid and the cold should have liquid for their medium [and, if they
|
|
are cold, they will exist in the cold], while that which is due to the
|
|
dry will be found in the dry. Thus trees grow not in water but on
|
|
dry land. But the same theory would relegate them to the water, on
|
|
account of their excess of dryness, just as it does the things that
|
|
are excessively fiery. They would migrate thither not on account of
|
|
its cold but owing to its fluidity.
|
|
|
|
Thus the natural character of the material of objects is of the same
|
|
nature as the region in which they exist; the liquid is found in
|
|
liquid, the dry on land, the warm in air. With regard, however, to
|
|
states of body, a cold situation has, on the other hand, a
|
|
beneficial effect on excess of heat, and a warm environment on
|
|
excess of cold, for the region reduces to a mean the excess in the
|
|
bodily condition. The regions appropriate to each material and the
|
|
revolutions of the seasons which all experience supply the means which
|
|
must be sought in order to correct such excesses; but, while states of
|
|
the body can be opposed in character to the environment, the
|
|
material of which it is composed can never be so. This, then, is a
|
|
sufficient explanation of why it is not owing to the heat in their
|
|
constitution that some animals are aquatic, others terrestrial, as
|
|
Empedocles maintains, and of why some possess lungs and others do not.
|
|
|
|
21
|
|
|
|
The explanation of the admission of air and respiration in those
|
|
animals in which a lung is found, and especially in those in which
|
|
it is full of blood, is to be found in the fact that it is of a spongy
|
|
nature and full of tubes, and that it is the most fully charged with
|
|
blood of all the visceral organs. All animals with a full-blooded lung
|
|
require rapid refrigeration because there is little scope for
|
|
deviation from the normal amount of their vital fire; the air also
|
|
must penetrate all through it on account of the large quantity of
|
|
blood and heat it contains. But both these operations can be easily
|
|
performed by air, for, being of a subtle nature, it penetrates
|
|
everywhere and that rapidly, and so performs its cooling function; but
|
|
water has the opposite characteristics.
|
|
|
|
The reason why animals with a full-blooded lung respire most is
|
|
hence manifest; the more heat there is, the greater is the need for
|
|
refrigeration, and at the same time breath can easily pass to the
|
|
source of heat in the heart.
|
|
|
|
22
|
|
|
|
In order to understand the way in which the heart is connected
|
|
with the lung by means of passages, we must consult both dissections
|
|
and the account in the History of Animals. The universal cause of
|
|
the need which the animal has for refrigeration, is the union of the
|
|
soul with fire that takes place in the heart. Respiration is the means
|
|
of effecting refrigeration, of which those animals make use that
|
|
possess a lung as well as a heart. But when they, as for example the
|
|
fishes, which on account of their aquatic nature have no lung, possess
|
|
the latter organ without the former, the cooling is effected through
|
|
the gills by means of water. For ocular evidence as to how the heart
|
|
is situated relatively to the gills we must employ dissections, and
|
|
for precise details we must refer to Natural History. As a summarizing
|
|
statement, however, and for present purposes, the following is the
|
|
account of the matter.
|
|
|
|
It might appear that the heart has not the same position in
|
|
terrestrial animals and fishes, but the position really is
|
|
identical, for the apex of the heart is in the direction in which they
|
|
incline their heads. But it is towards the mouth in fishes that the
|
|
apex of the heart points, seeing that they do not incline their
|
|
heads in the same direction as land-animals do. Now from the extremity
|
|
of the heart a tube of a sinewy, arterial character runs to the centre
|
|
where the gills all join. This then is the largest of those ducts, but
|
|
on either side of the heart others also issue and run to the extremity
|
|
of each gill, and by means of the ceaseless flow of water through
|
|
the gills, effect the cooling which passes to the heart.
|
|
|
|
In similar fashion as the fish move their gills, respiring animals
|
|
with rapid action raise and let fall the chest according as the breath
|
|
is admitted or expelled. If air is limited in amount and unchanged
|
|
they are suffocated, for either medium, owing to contact with the
|
|
blood, rapidly becomes hot. The heat of the blood counteracts the
|
|
refrigeration and, when respiring animals can no longer move the
|
|
lung aquatic animals their gills, whether owing to discase or old age,
|
|
their death ensues.
|
|
|
|
23
|
|
|
|
To be born and to die are common to all animals, but there are
|
|
specifically diverse ways in which these phenomena occur; of
|
|
destruction there are different types, though yet something is
|
|
common to them all. There is violent death and again natural death,
|
|
and the former occurs when the cause of death is external, the
|
|
latter when it is internal, and involved from the beginning in the
|
|
constitution of the organ, and not an affection derived from a foreign
|
|
source. In the case of plants the name given to this is withering,
|
|
in animals senility. Death and decay pertain to all things that are
|
|
not imperfectly developed; to the imperfect also they may be
|
|
ascribed in nearly the same but not an identical sense. Under the
|
|
imperfect I class eggs and seeds of plants as they are before the root
|
|
appears.
|
|
|
|
It is always to some lack of heat that death is due, and in
|
|
perfect creatures the cause is its failure in the organ containing the
|
|
source of the creature's essential nature. This member is situate,
|
|
as has been said, at the junction of the upper and lower parts; in
|
|
plants it is intermediate between the root and the stem, in
|
|
sanguineous animals it is the heart, and in those that are bloodless
|
|
the corresponding part of their body. But some of these animals have
|
|
potentially many sources of life, though in actuality they possess
|
|
only one. This is why some insects live when divided, and why, even
|
|
among sanguineous animals, all whose vitality is not intense live
|
|
for a long time after the heart has been removed. Tortoises, for
|
|
example, do so and make movements with their feet, so long as the
|
|
shell is left, a fact to be explained by the natural inferiority of
|
|
their constitution, as it is in insects also.
|
|
|
|
The source of life is lost to its possessors when the heat with
|
|
which it is bound up is no longer tempered by cooling, for, as I
|
|
have often remarked, it is consumed by itself. Hence when, owing to
|
|
lapse of time, the lung in the one class and the gills in the other
|
|
get dried up, these organs become hard and earthy and incapable of
|
|
movement, and cannot be expanded or contracted. Finally things come to
|
|
a climax, and the fire goes out from exhaustion.
|
|
|
|
Hence a small disturbance will speedily cause death in old age.
|
|
Little heat remains, for the most of it has been breathed away in
|
|
the long period of life preceding, and hence any increase of strain on
|
|
the organ quickly causes extinction. It is just as though the heart
|
|
contained a tiny feeble flame which the slightest movement puts out.
|
|
Hence in old age death is painless, for no violent disturbance is
|
|
required to cause death, and there is an entire absence of feeling
|
|
when the soul's connexion is severed. All diseases which harden the
|
|
lung by forming tumours or waste residues, or by excess of morbid
|
|
heat, as happens in fevers, accelerate the breathing owing to the
|
|
inability of the lung to move far either upwards or downwards.
|
|
Finally, when motion is no longer possible, the breath is given out
|
|
and death ensues.
|
|
|
|
24
|
|
|
|
Generation is the initial participation, mediated by warm substance,
|
|
in the nutritive soul, and life is the maintenance of this
|
|
participation. Youth is the period of the growth of the primary
|
|
organ of refrigeration, old age of its decay, while the intervening
|
|
time is the prime of life.
|
|
|
|
A violent death or dissolution consists in the extinction or
|
|
exhaustion of the vital heat (for either of these may cause
|
|
dissolution), while natural death is the exhaustion of the heat
|
|
owing to lapse of time, and occurring at the end of life. In plants
|
|
this is to wither, in animals to die. Death, in old age, is the
|
|
exhaustion due to inability on the part of the organ, owing to old
|
|
age, to produce refrigeration. This then is our account of
|
|
generation and life and death, and the reason for their occurrence
|
|
in animals.
|
|
|
|
25
|
|
|
|
It is hence also clear why respiring animals are suffocated in water
|
|
and fishes in air. For it is by water in the latter class, by air in
|
|
the former that refrigeration is effected, and either of these means
|
|
of performing the function is removed by a change of environment.
|
|
|
|
There is also to be explained in either case the cause of the
|
|
cause of the motion of the gills and of the lungs, the rise and fall
|
|
of which effects the admission and expulsion of the breath or of
|
|
water. The following, moreover, is the manner of the constitution of
|
|
the organ.
|
|
|
|
26
|
|
|
|
In connexion with the heart there are three phenomena, which, though
|
|
apparently of the same nature, are really not so, namely
|
|
palpitation, pulsation, and respiration.
|
|
|
|
Palpitation is the rushing together of the hot substance in the
|
|
heart owing to the chilling influence of residual or waste products.
|
|
It occurs, for example, in the ailment known as 'spasms' and in
|
|
other diseases. It occurs also in fear, for when one is afraid the
|
|
upper parts become cold, and the hot substance, fleeing away, by its
|
|
concentration in the heart produces palpitation. It is crushed into so
|
|
small a space that sometimes life is extinguished, and the animals die
|
|
of the fright and morbid disturbance.
|
|
|
|
The beating of the heart, which, as can be seen, goes on
|
|
continuously, is similar to the throbbing of an abscess. That,
|
|
however, is accompanied by pain, because the change produced in the
|
|
blood is unnatural, and it goes on until the matter formed by
|
|
concoction is discharged. There is a similarity between this
|
|
phenomenon and that of boiling; for boiling is due to the
|
|
volatilization of fluid by heat and the expansion consequent on
|
|
increase of bulk. But in an abscess, if there is no evaporation
|
|
through the walls, the process terminates in suppuration due to the
|
|
thickening of the liquid, while in boiling it ends in the escape of
|
|
the fluid out of the containing vessel.
|
|
|
|
In the heart the beating is produced by the heat expanding the
|
|
fluid, of which the food furnishes a constant supply. It occurs when
|
|
the fluid rises to the outer wall of the heart, and it goes on
|
|
continuously; for there is a constant flow of the fluid that goes to
|
|
constitute the blood, it being in the heart that the blood receives
|
|
its primary elaboration. That this is so we can perceive in the
|
|
initial stages of generation, for the heart can be seen to contain
|
|
blood before the veins become distinct. This explains why pulsation in
|
|
youth exceeds that in older people, for in the young the formation
|
|
of vapour is more abundant.
|
|
|
|
All the veins pulse, and do so simultaneously with each other, owing
|
|
to their connexion with the heart. The heart always beats, and hence
|
|
they also beat continuously and simultaneously with each other and
|
|
with it.
|
|
|
|
Palpitation, then, is the recoil of the heart against the
|
|
compression due to cold; and pulsation is the volatilization of the
|
|
heated fluid.
|
|
|
|
27
|
|
|
|
Respiration takes place when the hot substance which is the seat
|
|
of the nutritive principle increases. For it, like the rest of the
|
|
body, requires nutrition, and more so than the members, for it is
|
|
through it that they are nourished. But when it increases it
|
|
necessarily causes the organ to rise. This organ we must to be
|
|
constructed like the bellows in a smithy, for both heart and lungs
|
|
conform pretty well to this shape. Such a structure must be double,
|
|
for the nutritive principle must be situated in the centre of the
|
|
natural force.
|
|
|
|
Thus on increase of bulk expansion results, which necessarily causes
|
|
the surrounding parts to rise. Now this can be seen to occur when
|
|
people respire; they raise their chest because the motive principle of
|
|
the organ described resident within the chest causes an identical
|
|
expansion of this organ. When it dilates the outer air must rush in as
|
|
into a bellows, and, being cold, by its chilling influence reduces
|
|
by extinction the excess of the fire. But, as the increase of bulk
|
|
causes the organ to dilate, so diminution causes contraction, and when
|
|
it collapses the air which entered must pass out again. When it enters
|
|
the air is cold, but on issuing it is warm owing to its contact with
|
|
the heat resident in this organ, and this is specially the case in
|
|
those animals that possess a full-blooded lung. The numerous
|
|
canal-like ducts in the lung, into which it passes, have each a
|
|
blood-vessel lying alongside, so that the whole lung is thought to
|
|
be full of blood. The inward passage of the air is called respiration,
|
|
the outward expiration, and this double movement goes on
|
|
continuously just so long as the animal lives and keeps this organ
|
|
in continuous motion; it is for this reason that life is bound up with
|
|
the passage of the breath outwards and inwards.
|
|
|
|
It is in the same way that the motion of the gills in fishes takes
|
|
place. When the hot substance in the blood throughout the members
|
|
rises, the gills rise too, and let the water pass through, but when it
|
|
is chilled and retreats through its channels to the heart, they
|
|
contract and eject the water. Continually as the heat in the heart
|
|
rises, continually on being chilled it returns thither again. Hence,
|
|
as in respiring animals life and death are bound up with
|
|
respiration, so in the other animals class they depend on the
|
|
admission of water.
|
|
|
|
Our discussion of life and death and kindred topics is now
|
|
practically complete. But health and discase also claim the
|
|
attention of the scientist, and not mercly of the physician, in so far
|
|
as an account of their causes is concerned. The extent to which
|
|
these two differ and investigate diverse provinces must not escape us,
|
|
since facts show that their inquiries are, to a certain extent, at
|
|
least conterminous. For physicians of culture and refinement make some
|
|
mention of natural science, and claim to derive their principles
|
|
from it, while the most accomplished investigators into nature
|
|
generally push their studies so far as to conclude with an account
|
|
of medical principles.
|
|
|
|
-THE END-
|
|
.
|