Page - 984 - in The Complete Plato
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older than the cultivated. For everything that partakes of life may be truly
called a living being, and the animal of which we are now speaking partakes
of the third kind of soul, which is said to be seated between the midriff and
the navel, having no part in opinion or reason or mind, but only in feelings of
pleasure and pain and the desires which accompany them. For this nature is
always in a passive state, revolving in and about itself, repelling the motion
from without and using its own, and accordingly is not endowed by nature
with the power of observing or reflecting on its own concerns. Wherefore it
lives and does not differ from a living being, but is fixed and rooted in the
same spot, having no power of self-motion.
Now after the superior powers had created all these natures to be food for
us who are of the inferior nature, they cut various channels through the body
as through a garden, that it might be watered as from a running stream. In the
first place, they cut two hidden channels or veins down the back where the
skin and the flesh join, which answered severally to the right and left side of
the body. These they let down along the backbone, so as to have the marrow
of generation between them, where it was most likely to flourish, and in order
that the stream coming down from above might flow freely to the other parts,
and equalize the irrigation. In the next place, they divided the veins about the
head, and interlacing them, they sent them in opposite directions; those
coming from the right side they sent to the left of the body, and those from the
left they diverted towards the right, so that they and the skin might together
form a bond which should fasten the head to the body, since the crown of the
head was not encircled by sinews; and also in order that the sensations from
both sides might be distributed over the whole body. And next, they ordered
the water-courses of the body in a manner which I will describe, and which
will be more easily understood if we begin by admitting that all things which
have lesser parts retain the greater, but the greater cannot retain the lesser.
Now of all natures fire has the smallest parts, and therefore penetrates through
earth and water and air and their compounds, nor can anything hold it. And a
similar principle applies to the human belly; for when meats and drinks enter
it, it holds them, but it cannot hold air and fire, because the particles of which
they consist are smaller than its own structure.
These elements, therefore, God employed for the sake of distributing
moisture from the belly into the veins, weaving together a network of fire and
air like a weel, having at the entrance two lesser weels; further he constructed
one of these with two openings, and from the lesser weels he extended cords
reaching all round to the extremities of the network. All the interior of the net
he made of fire, but the lesser weels and their cavity, of air. The network he
took and spread over the newly-formed animal in the following manner:—He
let the lesser weels pass into the mouth; there were two of them, and one he
984
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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