Opuscula logica, physica, allegorica, alia de vita philosophica you ask which of the lives the philosopher must choose, so that in having that one he

 And in part, and as each happened to have the capacity, they devised their arts but just as head and thorax and heart and liver are parts of the whol

 Superfluous, but the mind is distracted and divided by particular things. if, then, someone of those who have attained a state of knowledge brought th

 He thinks like the egyptians, automatic horses are fashioned and well-reined chariots of gods and the sprouting of wings and again their falling off,

 But the egyptians [possess] wisdom in a pre-eminent way, as the account also says. for these were the first to immortalize the soul, and by indescriba

 Semaram and this is a city of the babylonians for the name means confusion for there first the division of tongues occurred. and having rejected th

 We hold that they are of bodies, but to oracles and divinations and whatever they say about theurgy, we pay no heed, as they are forbidden. but the ci

 To feel no pain nor misfortune, but in the possession of the true good for one must grasp this alone, which is both ultimate and most honorable and w

 Of rational offspring, nor despairing of us for so great a birth, which aristotle himself alone might have conceived and brought forth. for if you hav

 Heracles could not have fled to eurystheus for neither was the one of such power, nor did the other require little addition, and for this reason iola

 Definitions. but their names are three, therefore also their definitions are three. and let socrates be posited in the argument as defined in three wa

 But some who have said in places in their own writings that they are synonymous, have fallen far from the greatness of the truth, fearing a fear there

 “substance is a self-subsistent thing.” then, indeed, the more serious and noble of the philosophers are at a loss, how can this be self-subsistent, w

 The ultimate cause for all things need the good, and nothing better than goodness comes to us. this, then, which is called god by us, but is called t

 And moved only, but since it is near to the soul, it is also self-moved. i have enumerated all these things, at once leading you to great learning, an

 If you go up to the former beginning. therefore none of existing things is self-subsistent, as having its generation from itself. but we call substanc

 For affective motion is a path to the form, as is any other motion but when it arrives at the form, it stands still and ceases to be affected and alt

 A part has its being in relation to a whole for the part is a part of a whole, and the whole is a whole of parts. for substance is defined as existin

 Of animate beings, and color they say is the superficial appearance. and that i may again speak to you summarily about the species of quality, state i

 11 concerning the second book of the prior analytics you asked what is the purpose of the second book of the prior analytics. its purpose, then, is to

 True. however, the universal affirmative is proved in the middle and third figures, but in the first it is not proved. but opposed propositions are fo

 Of coordinate terms, if they follow alike in demolition and in establishment for it belongs or does not belong to one and all at the same time for i

 The land animal and that difference always signifies a quality of the genus, but the genus does not of the difference for one who says 'land animal'

 A different taking and placement of the premises. for one of them is in the first, another in the second, and another in the third figure. concerning

 Learning is teaching therefore, to learn is to teach.” these, then, are the fallacies dependent on expression but of the fallacies outside of expres

 To make the premise the problem for example, the soul is incorruptible the incorruptible is immortal therefore, the soul is immortal. nothing has

 Apostolic or otherwise patristic is not in our accounts but some of those among us who are too exalted have dared to say that the seed, having taken

 The head of the animal ruling all the meninges and the brain, whence it radiates from there into this part, if, with the star being well-situated and

 Held the generative parts within and fashioned the conceived thing female. for the right cavity of the uterus from above receives the beginning of the

 Powers come into being, and sometimes very foolishly but for the more licentious, they are both stronger and bolder, and more precise in practical in

 As if making a song for it, he both makes his voice brilliant and crows loudly. and what is more wondrous, the lion fears this one when it sees it, be

 10. what is the cause for which falling bodies make larger and smaller circles on still waters? you are puzzled how on still waters any small body tha

 Easily crushed, but the crushing does not remain, as with wool or a sponge not crushable but compressible. and those things are compressed which have

 Of the power by which we live, that is, of the nutritive and augmentative, but different in principle for it is not in respect to that by which it no

 It as much as is sufficient, and secretes the rest. he did not say that the stomach does not process the food, but that it is processed by the lower b

 Its being consists in becoming. for it might be like water from melting snow, as one part after another is generated, and just as in this case water i

 When they fall on dry land, when they gasp. further, when all breathing creatures die by drowning in liquid, bubbles are formed from the breath exitin

 The fire. generation is the first participation in the hot of the nutritive life, life is its persistence. youth is the increase of the first cooling

 They leap out. therefore, one must begin with hoarfrost and first discuss its nature. this, accordingly, hardly ever occurs in warm places and in summ

 It is indeed warm, as we know, not however a self-acting fire, but it is ignited when moved. since, then, such is the nature of the fuel, and it is mo

 Being torn apart, the rain immediately came down as if from a burst sack, and the sound of the bursting produced the thunder. but in that case the clo

 Of paradise, but now, envying the earth as well, he tries to drive us out. you, therefore, seem to me to think that i have extended the discourse more

 Of vapor but hail of something colder, i mean of water. just as snow is colder than hail, so too is frost than ice but because of the opposition, ha

 The matter of the winds being gathered together in a single action, but it comes into being continuously as the vapor changes. and while there are fou

 Blows, but from the summer tropic. 22 by the same author, concerning thunder, lightning, thunderbolt, fiery whirlwind, cloud-burst wind, and typhoon.

 It is cold by nature, but becomes warm in a warm season. the etesian winds blow especially in summer because the sun, going towards the north, melts t

 The color in the purple dye but the halo has only the color white. and the <halo is formed on smooth and uniform clouds, but the> rainbow is formed o

 Since from a dense surface vision is more easily and quickly reflected, but from a smooth surface one and the same color is preserved. since, therefor

 The great generation of the smoky exhalation. and the milky way, which is what the comet is around one star and what the halo is around the moon or su

 And brastae. epicliniae are those that shake sideways in a wave-like manner, brastae those that shake and move up and down. among them are some that a

 Of water, it showed that which contained it unharmed, but that which was contained within it disappeared. and not least of all, falling upon vessels h

 With many swellings and hollows and all sorts of shapes, it sends forth every kind of sound. and already waters have burst forth when earthquakes happ

 The entire support of the universe has been shaken, and the secure seat of our nature needs a supporting hand and foundation. thus our affairs have co

 Directing the parts of creation concerned with becoming is borne more disorderly. and indeed this: unusual stars are made new in the super-terrestrial

 Of all things, however, that some are divided from each other, but he has harmonized all things melodiously, or rather, he has received them harmonize

 We assign the entire power of what is done to more immediate causes. but just as we derive other things and nature itself from god, so indeed do we re

 Not only the sword, but it has also been brought upon us, and terrible arrows, truly full of deadly poison, have been shot into our hearts, and the fi

 Having conceived of what was to be, he worked for whatever purpose, but it turned out, along with the other need, also into what is now admired. one m

 The ceiling also contributes to the matter, not being too high, but as if lying upon and not dissipating the voice. but, one might say, these are powe

 He calls certain things paradoxes. and he makes a certain detection of unseen thieves, by cutting off and salting the tongues of tadpoles, then at the

 For three whole days. a smith's anvil will be most easily dissolved when smeared with goat's blood. and a rooster would never crow if its nostrils are

 If a crow caws twice, it indicates a share in good and pleasant deeds but if once or three or five times, it portends the opposite for you but if it

 We know, but we do not encounter them, i will begin from those more familiar to us. for example, the diamond this has a glassy and gleaming color, an

 It cures ulcers when drunk with milk, and it is desiccative and astringent and an antidote to acute fevers. sardonyx: this stone has a white line in i

 Of the so-called elements i have undertaken for you an explanation. and i am not unaware that all who repay someone for the good they have received fr

 They are fitting, and the nature above the all, which in being participated in guards that which is unparticipated, is symbolically and ineffably hidd

 For these too show that from every side the first cause is equal and similar to itself and has in nothing departed from its own nature, but it is most

 Echoing the diphthongs, it draws along much sound from the breath, and for this reason those are suitable for lamentations, but these simple vowels, p

 The soul might know, it is goaded and maddened and is somehow unrestrained in its impulses, whence it proceeds towards all things with full speed, run

 Of the second is divided in the middle and the split of the divided parts, beginning from the same impulse, proceeds to the greatest distance. for ju

 For the active principle comes from close attention. but to close the eyes to such an extent as not to seem to “dwell in a small body” according to th

 And you have become like ˉo, a perfected and pure intellect, both turning back into itself and restored to itself, and you have been freed from the na

 Of the stream as was possible, but you have not yet drawn up the whole, but an immense sea is what has been left, which indeed is undiminished forever

 Admonishing symbolically to grasp the things that appear. but the chi suggests a philosophy greater than the phi, for since that which appears often a

 From there we shall also find the continuity of the preceding things in relation to this. for since the phi indicated that which appears, the chi that

 But we have also set beside it something of the perfect, we have stamped this in a type and image and have fashioned the body of the discourse twofold

 And this in dreams, if the soul follows the things seen, if it knows that it has been initiated, if it seems to see a light, if it supposes an intangi

 It passes over places or comes to be in places, but that it undertakes relationships with bodies that are by nature adapted to change places. and as i

 In that. and this was said, i think, by plato well and with deep thought. therefore, you will not give extension to eternity, nor unfold it, nor stret

 Of an artful discourse, having the quality of transformation, just as if someone were to make salt waters drinkable. but moses indeed worked this wond

 He makes the discourse, some reporting the service they have administered, others receiving a providential power from him. and what a truly golden flo

 For having received from god the administration of things here, they both govern the things here and are not separated from divine things. therefore,

 He adds the better things. such is the second opinion of the greeks concerning zeus. the third is perhaps more historical and more true for they gene

 The tongue is unruly with fire, because this alone of the elements naturally bubbles and resounds continually for the earth, being stationary and unm

 And true opinion, the conclusion of the intellect, is all rational and divine but imagination and sensation and all that needs a body for its existen

 Flew away, it became a fair-faced virgin, like an incorruptible and pure mind, naked of its outer covering, but what was held back is a beast, hairy a

 The theologians of the greeks, cancer and capricorn, but plato said two openings of these, cancer is the one through which souls descend, and caprico

 Investigating things above heaven and things below the earth. and one of you nibbles at the golden chain, another at the swinging, and simply another

 The better things, but the better things are not turned towards the worse, so long as it maintains its own order. thus, therefore, body ascends to sou

 That through loving-kindness, having placed himself in the middle of the universe, according to plato, as a kind of paradigm he draws us to himself th

 Flowing along with time, die and perish, but the word alone blossoms and grows young again and becomes mightier. but since it comes to us who have bee

 A hollow sound, but not of something that has already been moved and has stopped. but homer does the opposite in his verses for he says, when he had

 Of thought under a sober bacchic frenzy—so that i may say something of the more secret things—, but in order to show that for homer the bow has been n

 Forms are forerunners of tracks, but now the form upon the forms, so indeed for the poet all things are at once, the bending, the stretching, the twa

 Of existing things, some have a disputed existence, like a starless sphere, like the antipodes—for these are disputed, whether they exist or not—, whi

 The subject is private and public problems, and its end is to persuade, while for grammar, the subject is all greek words, and its end is to never mak

 It has as its subject matter things that simply are, but as its remote subject matter things that are of a certain kind, such as divine and human affa

 He wills, he is able. upon which the fourth definition also follows. after plato and pythagoras, then, who defined philosophy in two ways, comes the w

 A certain property having come into being for species, this they called a property, for example, to laugh belongs to man alone. seeing that some thing

 It is likewise thus for the rest. synopsis of the ten categories the ancients, seeing that of things from nature some are self-subsistent, while other

 Differing in number, and makes the species, such as man but if the utterance is super-substantial, that is, contemplated upon the substance, it is ei

 Reads, but also he himself differs from himself when he is a child and when he has grown up, and sometimes when he is sitting, and sometimes when he i

 Let us discuss. homonyms are things of which the name alone is common, but the account of the substance corresponding to the name is different, for ex

 But it is in no subject, for example, man. it is predicated of some subject, that is, it is categorized, but it is in no subject, which he understands

 For genera that are not subordinate to one another, the differentiae, both constitutive and divisive, are different, as for example animal and knowled

 Signifying, which is also predicated of accidents, insofar as these too are called substances as having their existence in it. substance is also the n

 A property. therefore he also says, it is common to every substance not to be in a subject. for as we have already said above, that which is 'in a s

 They brought on the battle for the moist and cold quality, having fallen upon the hot and dry quality, destroyed the other quality. but it is not a p

 Were the contraries in the same thing—, but he said receptive in order to show its potentiality. and having stated this property of substance, he ad

 Of it as if some cornerstone for you say three and three are six and having said the three only, you are silent, and again you add another three,

 Such a one, but if perhaps a quality of the soul for it is a certain disposition or state having its constitution. but it is necessary to know that a

 Have quantity, nothing is contrary to them. but if straightness and curvedness are found concerning the line, and odd and even concerning number, yet

 A little, and these are among the relatives for the great is said in relation to the small and the little is known in relation to the much. but he en

 Admits of contrariety and the things concerning it will admit of relation, {for like is said more and less and} <for instance> vice is contrary to vir

 Unless the correspondence is proper and exact and related to that of which it is said for example, if slave is rendered not as of a master but o

 Perception, neither falling under perception nor being receptive of perception. but if perception is removed, it will not remove the perceptible objec

 And these simple utterances, in turn, differ from each other by certain generic differences. for some of them signify substance, such as the utterance

 And it is properly its own characteristic for substance alone, while remaining incorruptible, changes, for example, a man, altering nothing of his hu

 The shape of a quality and the form existing around each thing. it differs in that shape is properly applied to inanimate things, while form is proper

 Into the future like tomorrow. on position there are three kinds of position: reclining, standing, sitting for if it has all its parts upright, it

 Of that which is for even when socrates is sick we say that “socrates is not healthy”. it applies also to that which is not we are able to say that

 To the 'some' and the 'no one' to the 'not all' is called subaltern. therefore, with so many pairs arising from the quantified propositions, we pass o

 A particle from the simple negation that says a man is not just to the predicate, to just, and to make another affirmation which is called by tran

 Can also be separated, but others not, for example you can say of one who has died at the same time a dead man, but separately it is not possible to c

 Negative and again if a syllogism is found composed of a universal premise and a particular one, the conclusion also becomes particular in proportion

 Otherwise his heat is contradicted but zeus is the aether, an active element mixed with the quality of both dryness and heat. therefore, these elemen

 To zeus. for which reason he does not linger much in the upper regions, but is cast down «from the divine threshold,» as the poet says a little later.

 And produces milk. honey is not pungent of itself but well-tempered, but the tongue makes it more pungent by its own heat. there is a honey called gal

 Mother of pentheus, because many when exceedingly drunk turned to murder. dionysus is naked because of the revealing of the drinker's reasoning. he de

 A straightened intestine presses therefore when it is relaxed, the retained pneuma slips out. when we yawn or urinate we shiver, because some part of

 And of belching <***>, is sneezing sacred? because flatulence is of the lower belly, belching of the upper, and sneezing of the head, which is most di

 By a principle of heat. from diseased nourishment, reddish hair, from healthy, black. the ethiopians have woolly hair, because the hair, being dried b

 The voices of irrational animals were found by imitation, for instance children call an ox from its mooing and a dog from its barking. those who are s

 Strength is taken away. but the yellow bile is from the system of badly constructed flesh, so that it makes no difference to remove much bile and fles

 Purges downwards, but the white one does the opposite and purges upwards. of the viviparous quadrupeds, none is suffocated by the uterus, because for

 If they do not make a sound while suckling, they do not release milk, because they force everything with their breath, and they make a sound while hol

 They use up moisture both in flight and in the sprouting of their feathers from then on, the dung also comes out with moisture. children form stones

 The brain. perfect men do not tolerate this. some drunkards see double the muscles <of the> eyes, being filled by the great moisture and becoming sla

 Has given a cure. why does still water make circles when a stone is thrown? the stone, by the tension of its throw, pushes away the water from afar be

 Grow hair, because being of a cleansing nature they wipe away the phlegmatic excess. why do scars not also grow hair on humans as they do on irrationa

 Is brought down. therefore the humor, having been carried into the bronchi of the lung and having filled it, generates the affection. but from peripne

 Because of the perpetual motion of the lung and of the heart and because of the cough being cleansed by the sputum. when the fevers diminish, hairs an

 Of the one grieving, or through weakness and incidentally as in the case of a stumbling of the toe, a bubo for when nature rushes with the blood, the

 To which the ancients also gave their right hands, setting forth the perfection of the number. in the case of ringing ears, we insert the finger, beca

 They have the greater part in potentiality and in actuality in the belly and liver, the alterative [power], in the sp<l>een, stomach, gall bladder an

 For in the liver, as the blood is concocted by commensurate heat and moisture, a spirit is generated this, ascending through the hollow vein with the

 Is spread out, that of the mouth of the stomach is wrapped around, but that of the belly becomes spherical. the same is also true for a cithara, which

 To exercise reason with experience, [then] if by chance some condition befalls you, applying the reason and exercising it and finding it to be true.”

 But to be prone to sweat and quick to move. older men protrude the lower lip, because their nature is relaxed, and the lower lip is larger and fleshie

 Of thick-parted bodies, but of the sensitive pneuma it is a thickener and for this reason productive of sleep. if an ulcer forms on the meninx, it is

10. What is the cause for which falling bodies make larger and smaller circles on still waters? You are puzzled how on still waters any small body that might fall is accustomed to make circles, smaller upon larger ones, and one is like a center, and the others follow one after another, and the first is larger than the others, and the last smaller [...] 17 Concerning the difference of composite bodies All things compounded from simple things differ from one another in both active and passive qualities. And these are as many as are spoken of in pairs: congealable, uncongealable; meltable, unmeltable; softenable, unsoftenable; capable of being soaked, incapable of being soaked; bendable, unbendable; breakable, unbreakable; shatterable, unshatterable; capable of being crushed, incapable of being crushed; pliable, unpliable; squeezable, unsqueezable; ductile, non-ductile; malleable, unmalleable; fissile, non-fissile; cuttable, uncuttable; capable of being compressed, incapable of being compressed; combustible, incombustible; capable of being vaporized, incapable of being vaporized; viscous, friable. All these are species of the two passive qualities, I mean, of the moist and the dry, and are mixed from these, and partake more of this one or of that one. Things therefore that have been solidified by dry heat are dissolved by water, which is moist and cold, but things solidified by cold are dissolved by fire, which is hot. Therefore, whatever things are of water are not solidified by fire; for they are dissolved by fire. But whatever things are common to earth and water are solidified both by fire and by cold, and are thickened by both. But whatever things are soft, and indeed moist, are not thickened but are solidified as the moisture departs, for instance, baked pottery; but whatever moist things among the mixed are also thickened, for instance, milk. And the fire-resistant stone also melts and millstones, so as to flow. Clay and earth also melt. Therefore, whatever things have more water than earth are thickened by fire alone, but are solidified, whatever are of earth. Wherefore both natron and salts are more of earth, and stone and pottery. But whatever things are mixed of water and earth, it is worth speaking according to the amount of each; for a certain wine both solidifies and is boiled, for instance, new wine. Therefore, whatever things are not thickened by cold, but are solidified, are more of water, for instance, wine and urine and such things. But whatever things are thickened without evaporating by fire, some are of earth, and others common to water and air; honey is of earth, but oil is of air. And milk and blood are common to both water and earth, but are for the most part of earth. And some are soluble, for instance, natron, but others insoluble, for instance, pottery; and some are softenable, for instance, horn, but others unsoftenable, for instance, pottery and stone. But woods are of earth and air; wherefore they are combustible and not meltable nor softenable. {wherefore they are combustible and intelligible nor softenable.} But pottery is of earth alone. Therefore, from water and earth the homoeomerous bodies are composed, and the very things that are mined, for instance, gold and silver and all other such things, both from these themselves and from the exhalation of each being enclosed within. And these differ from one another in their particular properties with respect to the senses. And uncongealable are whatever things do not have a watery moisture nor are of water, but more of heat and earth, for instance, honey. And softenable among solidified things are whatever things are not from water, for instance, crystal, but whatever are more of earth. And of both meltable and unmeltable things, some are capable of being soaked, for instance, wool and earth, but others are incapable of being soaked, for instance, bronze. And nothing else is capable of being soaked which does not become softer when wetted. And capable of being soaked are whatever things, being of earth, have larger pores, but meltable in water are whatever are porous throughout. And bendable and capable of being straightened, for instance, a reed and a willow-twig, but unbendable, for instance, pottery and stone. And breakable and shatterable, together or separately, for instance, wood is breakable, but not shatterable, but pottery is both shatterable and breakable. Now, a break is the division into large parts, but shattering is into random ones. And a crushing of a surface in part is a displacement into the depth. And crushable things are both soft, for instance, wax, and hard, for instance, bronze. But uncrushable and hard, for instance, pottery. And of crushable things, whatever remain when crushed, these are pliable, but others are either not easily crushed, like stone or wood, or

ιʹ. Τίς ἡ αἰτία δι' ἣν ἐπὶ τῶν στασίμων ὑδάτων κύκλους ποιοῦσι τὰ πίπτοντα σώματα μείζονας καὶ ἐλάττονασ Ἀπορεῖς πῶς ἐπὶ τῶν στασίμων ὑδάτων πᾶν εἴ τι προσπέσοι σωμάτιον κύκλους ποιεῖν εἴωθεν ἐλάττονας ἐπὶ μείζοσι, καὶ τὸ μὲν οἷον κέντρον ἐστίν, οἱ δὲ ἐπεισφρήσουσιν ἄλλος ἐπ' ἄλλῳ, καὶ ὁ μὲν πρῶτος μείζων τῶν ἄλλων, ὁ δὲ τελευταῖος ἔλαττον [...] 17 Περὶ τῆς διαφορᾶς τῶν συνθέτων σωμάτων Πάντα τὰ ἐκ τῶν ἁπλῶν σύνθετα διαφέρει μὲν ἀλλήλων ποιητικαῖς τε καὶ παθητικαῖς ποιότησιν. ἔστι δὲ ταῦτά τε καὶ τοσαῦτα κατὰ συζυγίαν λεγόμενα πηκτὸν ἄπηκτον, τηκτὸν ἄτηκτον, μαλακτὸν ἀμάλακτον, τεγκτὸν ἄτεγκτον, καμπτὸν ἄκαμπτον, κατακτὸν ἀκάτακτον, θραυστὸν ἄθραυστον, θλαστὸν ἄθλαστον, πλαστὸν ἄπλαστον, πιεστὸν ἀπίεστον, ἑλκτὸν ἄνελκτον, ἐλατὸν ἀνέλατον, σχιστὸν ἄσχιστον, τμητὸν ἄτμητον, πιλητὸν ἀπίλητον, καυστὸν ἄκαυστον, θυμιατὸν ἀθυμίατον, γλίσχρον ψαθυρόν. Ταῦτα δὲ πάντα εἴδη μέν εἰσι τῶν δυεῖν παθητικῶν ποιοτήτων, τοῦ ὑγροῦ λέγω καὶ τοῦ ξηροῦ, καὶ μέμικται ἐκ τούτων, μᾶλλον δὲ τοῦδε ἢ ἐκείνου μετέχει. τὰ μὲν οὖν ὑπὸ ξηροῦ θερμοῦ παγέντα ὑπὸ ὕδατος λύεται, ὅ ἐστιν ὑγρὸν ψυχρόν, τὰ δὲ ὑπὸ ψυχροῦ παγέντα ὑπὸ πυρὸς λύεται, ὅ ἐστι θερμόν. ὅσα μὲν οὖν ἐστιν ὕδατος, οὐ πήγνυται ὑπὸ πυρός· λύεται γὰρ ὑπὸ πυρός. ὅσα δὲ κοινὰ γῆς καὶ ὕδατος, καὶ ὑπὸ πυρὸς πήγνυται καὶ ὑπὸ ψυχροῦ, παχύνεται δὲ ὑπ' ἀμφοῖν. ὅσα δὲ μαλακά, ἀλλὰ μὴν ὑγρά, οὐ παχύνεται ἀλλὰ πήγνυται ἐξιόντος τοῦ ὑγροῦ, οἷον ὁ ὀπτώμενος κέραμος· ὅσα δὲ ὑγρὰ τῶν μικτῶν, καὶ παχύνεται, οἷον γάλα. τήκεται δὲ καὶ ὁ λίθος ὁ πυρίμαχος καὶ αἱ μύλαι ὥστε ῥεῖν. τήκεται καὶ ὁ πηλὸς καὶ ἡ γῆ. παχύνεται μὲν οὖν ὑπὸ πυρὸς μόνον ὅσα ὕδατος πλέον ἔχει ἢ γῆς, πήγνυται δὲ ὅσα γῆς. διὸ καὶ τὸ νίτρον καὶ οἱ ἅλες γῆς εἰσι μᾶλλον, καὶ λίθος καὶ κέραμος. ὅσα δὲ μικτὰ ὕδατος καὶ γῆς, κατὰ τὸ πλῆθος ἑκατέρου ἄξιον λέγεσθαι· οἶνος γάρ τις καὶ πήγνυται καὶ ἕψεται, οἷον τὸ γλεῦκος. ὅσα μὲν οὖν μὴ παχύνεται ὑπὸ τοῦ ψυχροῦ, ἀλλὰ πήγνυται, ὕδατός ἐστι μᾶλλον, οἷον οἶνος καὶ οὖρον καὶ τὰ τοιαῦτα. ὅσα δὲ παχύνεται μὴ ἐξατμίζοντα ὑπὸ πυρός, τὰ μὲν γῆς, τὰ δὲ κοινὰ ὕδατος καὶ ἀέρος, μέλι μὲν γῆς, ἔλαιον δὲ ἀέρος. καὶ τὸ γάλα δὲ καὶ τὸ αἷμα ἀμφοῖν μὲν κοινὰ καὶ ὕδατος καὶ γῆς, μᾶλλον δὲ τὰ πολλὰ γῆς. καὶ τὰ μὲν λυτά ἐστιν, οἷον νίτρον, τὰ δὲ ἄλυτα, οἷον κέραμος, καὶ τὰ μὲν μαλακτά, οἷον κέρας, τὰ δὲ ἀμάλακτα, οἷον κέραμος καὶ λίθος. τὰ δὲ ξύλα γῆς ἐστι καὶ ἀέρος· διὸ καυστὰ καὶ οὐ τηκτὰ οὐδὲ μαλακτά. {διὸ καυστὰ καὶ νοητὰ οὐδὲ μαλακτά.} κέραμος δὲ γῆς μόνον. Ἐκ μὲν οὖν ὕδατος καὶ γῆς τὰ ὁμοιομερῆ συνίστανται σώματα καὶ αὐτὰ τὰ μεταλλευόμενα, οἷον χρυσὸς καὶ ἄργυρος καὶ ὅσα ἄλλα τοιαῦτα, ἐξ αὐτῶν τε καὶ τῆς ἀναθυμιάσεως τῆς ἑκατέρου ἐναποκλειομένης. ταῦτα δὲ διαφέρει ἀλλήλων τοῖς πρὸς τὰς αἰσθήσεις ἰδίοις. Ἄπηκτα δέ ἐστιν ὅσα μὴ ἔχει ὑγρότητα ὑδατώδη μηδ' ὕδατός ἐστιν, ἀλλὰ πλέον θερμοῦ καὶ γῆς, οἷον τὸ μέλι. μαλακτὰ δέ ἐστι τῶν πεπηγότων ὅσα μὴ ἐξ ὕδατος, οἷον κρύσταλλος, ἀλλ' ὅσα γῆς μᾶλλον. ἔστι δὲ καὶ τῶν τηκτῶν καὶ τῶν ἀτήκτων τὰ μὲν τεγκτά, οἷον ἔριον καὶ γῆ, τὰ δὲ ἄτεγκτα, οἷον χαλκός. οὐδὲ δὲ ἄλλο τεγκτὸν οὐδὲν ὃ μὴ μαλακώτερον γίνεται βρεχόμενον. ἔστι δὲ τεγκτὰ μὲν ὅσα γῆς ὄντα ἔχει τοὺς πόρους μείζους, τηκτὰ δὲ ὕδατι ὅσα δι' ὅλου. καὶ καμπτὰ μὲν καὶ εὐθυντά, οἷον κάλαμος καὶ λύγος, ἄκαμπτα δέ, οἷον κέραμος καὶ λίθος. κατακτὰ δὲ καὶ θραυστὰ ἅμα ἢ χωρίς, οἷον ξύλον κατακτὸν μέν, θραυστὸν δ' οὔ, κέραμος δὲ καὶ θραυστὸν καὶ κατακτόν. ἔστι δὲ κάταξις μὲν ἡ εἰς τὰ μεγάλα μέρη διαίρεσις, θραῦσις δὲ ἡ εἰς τὰ τυχόντα. καὶ θλάσις ἐπιπέδου κατὰ μέρος εἰς βάθος μετάστασις. ἔστι δὲ τὰ θλαστὰ καὶ μαλακτά, οἷον κηρός, καὶ σκληρά, οἷον χαλκός. ἄθλαστα δὲ καὶ σκληρά, οἷον κέραμος. τῶν δὲ θλαστῶν ὅσα μὲν μένει θλασθέντα, ταῦτα τὰ πλαστά, τὰ δὲ ἢ μὴ εὔθλαστα, ὥσπερ λίθος ἢ ξύλον, ἢ