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out of other materials: God took such of the primary triangles as were straight
and smooth, and were adapted by their perfection to produce fire and water,
and air and earth—these, I say, he separated from their kinds, and mingling
them in due proportions with one another, made the marrow out of them to be
a universal seed of the whole race of mankind; and in this seed he then
planted and enclosed the souls, and in the original distribution gave to the
marrow as many and various forms as the different kinds of souls were
hereafter to receive. That which, like a field, was to receive the divine seed,
he made round every way, and called that portion of the marrow, brain,
intending that, when an animal was perfected, the vessel containing this
substance should be the head; but that which was intended to contain the
remaining and mortal part of the soul he distributed into figures at once round
and elongated, and he called them all by the name ‘marrow’; and to these, as
to anchors, fastening the bonds of the whole soul, he proceeded to fashion
around them the entire framework of our body, constructing for the marrow,
first of all a complete covering of bone.
Bone was composed by him in the following manner. Having sifted pure
and smooth earth he kneaded it and wetted it with marrow, and after that he
put it into fire and then into water, and once more into fire and again into
water—in this way by frequent transfers from one to the other he made it
insoluble by either. Out of this he fashioned, as in a lathe, a globe made of
bone, which he placed around the brain, and in this he left a narrow opening;
and around the marrow of the neck and back he formed vertebrae which he
placed under one another like pivots, beginning at the head and extending
through the whole of the trunk. Thus wishing to preserve the entire seed, he
enclosed it in a stone-like casing, inserting joints, and using in the formation
of them the power of the other or diverse as an intermediate nature, that they
might have motion and flexure. Then again, considering that the bone would
be too brittle and inflexible, and when heated and again cooled would soon
mortify and destroy the seed within— having this in view, he contrived the
sinews and the flesh, that so binding all the members together by the sinews,
which admitted of being stretched and relaxed about the vertebrae, he might
thus make the body capable of flexion and extension, while the flesh would
serve as a protection against the summer heat and against the winter cold, and
also against falls, softly and easily yielding to external bodies, like articles
made of felt; and containing in itself a warm moisture which in summer
exudes and makes the surface damp, would impart a natural coolness to the
whole body; and again in winter by the help of this internal warmth would
form a very tolerable defence against the frost which surrounds it and attacks
it from without. He who modelled us, considering these things, mixed earth
with fire and water and blended them; and making a ferment of acid and salt,
981
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book The Complete Plato"
The Complete Plato
- Title
- The Complete Plato
- Author
- Plato
- Date
- ~347 B.C.
- Language
- English
- License
- PD
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 1612
- Keywords
- Philosophy, Antique, Philosophie, Antike, Dialogues, Metaphysik, Metaphysics, Ideologie, Ideology, Englisch
- Categories
- Geisteswissenschaften
- International