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| Motion Vindicated from the Charge of Irregularity; Circular; Straight; Of Generation and Corruption; Of Alteration, and Quality Affecting Sense. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter VII.—Motion
Vindicated from the Charge of Irregularity; Circular; Straight; Of
Generation and Corruption; Of Alteration, and Quality Affecting
Sense.
There is added to the discourse an appendix quite
foreign to it.2202 For you
may reasonably speak of motion not existing. And what, also, is
the matter of motion? Is it straight or circular? Or does
it take place by a process of change, or by a process of generation and
corruption? The circular motion, indeed, is so orderly and
composite, that it is ascribed to the order of all created things; nor
does this, in the Manichæan system, appear worthy to be impugned,
in which move the sun and the moon, whom alone, of the gods, they say
that they venerate.
But as regards that which is straight: to this, also, there is a
bound when it reaches its own place. For that which is earthly
ceases entirely from motion, as soon as it has touched the earth.
And every animal and vegetable makes an end of increasing when it has
reached its limit. Therefore the stoppage of these things would
be more properly the death of matter, than that endless death, which
is, as it were, woven for it by them. But the motion which arises
by a process of generation and corruption it is impossible to think of
as in harmony with this hypothesis, for, according to them, matter is
unbegotten. But if they ascribe to it the motion of alteration,
as they term it, and that by which we suffer change by a quality
affecting the sense, it is worth while to consider how they come to say
this. For this seems to be the principal thing that they assert,
since by matter it comes to pass, as they say, that manners are
changed, and that vice arises in the soul. For in altering, it
will always begin from the beginning; and, proceeding onwards, it will
reach the middle, and thus will it attain unto the end. But when
it has reached the end, it will not stand still, at least if alteration
is its essence. But it will again, by the same route, return to
the beginning, and from thence in like manner to the end; nor will it
ever cease from doing this. As, for instance, if α and γ
suffer alteration, and the middle is β, α by being changed,
will arrive at β, and from
thence will go on to γ.
Again returning from the extreme γ to β, it
will at some time or other arrive at α; and this goes on continuously. As in the
change from black, the middle is dun, and the extreme, white.
Again, in the contrary direction, from white to dun, and in like manner
to black; and again from white the change begins, and goes the same
round.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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