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It must also be concrete: or it could not be so determined. So since
everything that is determined and solid is either hard or soft and these
qualities are due to concretion, all composite and determined bodies must
involve concretion. Concretion therefore must be discussed.
Now there are two causes besides matter, the agent and the quality brought
about, the agent being the efficient cause, the quality the formal cause. Hence
concretion and disaggregation, drying and moistening, must have these two
causes.
But since concretion is a form of drying let us speak of the latter first.
As we have explained, the agent operates by means of two qualities and the
patient is acted on in virtue of two qualities: action takes place by means of
heat or cold, and the quality is produced either by the presence or by the
absence of heat or cold; but that which is acted upon is moist or dry or a
compound of both. Water is the element characterized by the moist, earth that
characterized by the dry, for these among the elements that admit the qualities
moist and dry are passive. Therefore cold, too, being found in water and earth
(both of which we recognize to be cold), must be reckoned rather as a passive
quality. It is active only as contributing to destruction or incidentally in the
manner described before; for cold is sometimes actually said to burn and to
warm, but not in the same way as heat does, but by collecting and
concentrating heat.
The subjects of drying are water and the various watery fluids and those
bodies which contain water either foreign or connatural. By foreign I mean
like the water in wool, by connatural, like that in milk. The watery fluids are
wine, urine, whey, and in general those fluids which have no sediment or only
a little, except where this absence of sediment is due to viscosity. For in some
cases, in oil and pitch for instance, it is the viscosity which prevents any
sediment from appearing.
It is always a process of heating or cooling that dries things, but the agent
in both cases is heat, either internal or external. For even when things are
dried by cooling, like a garment, where the moisture exists separately it is the
internal heat that dries them. It carries off the moisture in the shape of vapour
(if there is not too much of it), being itself driven out by the surrounding cold.
So everything is dried, as we have said, by a process either of heating or
cooling, but the agent is always heat, either internal or external, carrying off
the moisture in vapour. By external heat I mean as where things are boiled: by
internal where the heat breathes out and takes away and uses up its moisture.
So much for drying.
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The Complete Aristotle
- Title
- The Complete Aristotle
- Author
- Aristotle
- Date
- ~322 B.C.
- Language
- English
- License
- PD
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 2328
- Keywords
- Philosophy, Antique, Philosophie, Antike, Dialogues, Metaphysik, Metaphysics, Ideologie, Ideology, Englisch
- Categories
- Geisteswissenschaften
- International
Table of contents
- Part 1; Logic (Organon) 3
- Categories 4
- On Interpretation 34
- Prior Analytics, Book I 56
- Prior Analytics, Book II 113
- Posterior Analytics, Book I 149
- Posterior Analytics, Book II 193
- Topics, Book I 218
- Topics, Book II 221
- Topics, Book III 237
- Topics, Book IV 248
- Topics, Book V 266
- Topics, Book VI 291
- Topics, Book VII 317
- Topics, Book VIII 326
- On Sophistical Refutations 348
- Part 2; Universal Physics 396
- Physics, Book I 397
- Physics, Book II 415
- Physics, Book III 432
- Physics, Book IV 449
- Physics, Book V 481
- Physics, Book VI 496
- Physics, Book VII 519
- Physics, Book VIII 533
- On the Heavens, Book I 570
- On the Heavens, Book II 599
- On the Heavens, Book III 624
- On the Heavens, Book IV 640
- On Generation and Corruption, Book I 651
- On Generation and Corruption, Book II 685
- Meteorology, Book I 707
- Meteorology, Book II 733
- Meteorology, Book III 760
- Meteorology, Book IV 773
- Part 3; Human Physics 795
- On the Soul, Book I 796
- On the Soul, Book II 815
- On the Soul, Book III 840
- On Sense and the Sensible 861
- On Memory and Reminiscence 889
- On Sleep and Sleeplessness 899
- On Dreams 909
- On Prophesying by Dreams 918
- On Longevity and the Shortness of Life 923
- On Youth, Old Age, Life and Death, and Respiration 929
- Part 4; Animal Physics 952
- The History of Animals, Book I 953
- The History of Animals, Book II translated 977
- The History of Animals, Book III 1000
- The History of Animals, Book IV 1029
- The History of Animals, Book V 1056
- The History of Animals, Book VI 1094
- The History of Animals, Book VII 1135
- The History of Animals, Book VIII 1150
- The History of Animals, Book IX 1186
- On the Parts of Animals, Book I 1234
- On the Parts of Animals, Book II 1249
- On the Parts of Animals, Book III 1281
- On the Parts of Animals, Book IV 1311
- On the Motion of Animals 1351
- On the Gait of Animals 1363
- On the Generation of Animals, Book I 1381
- On the Generation of Animals, Book II 1412
- On the Generation of Animals, Book III 1444
- On the Generation of Animals, Book IV 1469
- On the Generation of Animals, Book V 1496
- Part 5; Metaphysics 1516
- Part 6; Ethics and Politics 1748
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book I 1749
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book II 1766
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book III 1779
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book IV 1799
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book V 1817
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book VI 1836
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book VII 1851
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book VIII 1872
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book IX 1890
- Nicomachean Ethics, Book X 1907
- Politics, Book I 1925
- Politics, Book II 1943
- Politics, Book III 1970
- Politics, Book IV 1997
- Politics, Book V 2023
- Politics, Book VI 2053
- Politics, Book VII 2065
- Politics, Book VIII 2091
- The Athenian Constitution 2102
- Part 7; Aesthetic Writings 2156