Part 8
By ‘quality’ I mean that
in virtue of which people are said to be such and
such.
Quality is a term that is used in
many senses. One sort of quality let us call
‘habit’ or ‘disposition’.
Habit differs from disposition in being more lasting
and more firmly established. The various kinds
of knowledge and of virtue are habits, for knowledge,
even when acquired only in a moderate degree, is, it
is agreed, abiding in its character and difficult to
displace, unless some great mental upheaval takes
place, through disease or any such cause. The
virtues, also, such as justice, self-restraint, and
so on, are not easily dislodged or dismissed, so as
to give place to vice.
By a disposition, on the other hand,
we mean a condition that is easily changed and quickly
gives place to its opposite. Thus, heat, cold,
disease, health, and so on are dispositions. For
a man is disposed in one way or another with reference
to these, but quickly changes, becoming cold instead
of warm, ill instead of well. So it is with all
other dispositions also, unless through lapse of time
a disposition has itself become inveterate and almost
impossible to dislodge: in which case we should
perhaps go so far as to call it a habit.
It is evident that men incline to
call those conditions habits which are of a more or
less permanent type and difficult to displace; for
those who are not retentive of knowledge, but volatile,
are not said to have such and such a ‘habit’
as regards knowledge, yet they are disposed, we may
say, either better or worse, towards knowledge.
Thus habit differs from disposition in this, that
while the latter in ephemeral, the former is permanent
and difficult to alter.
Habits are at the same time dispositions,
but dispositions are not necessarily habits.
For those who have some specific habit may be said
also, in virtue of that habit, to be thus or thus
disposed; but those who are disposed in some specific
way have not in all cases the corresponding habit.
Another sort of quality is that in
virtue of which, for example, we call men good boxers
or runners, or healthy or sickly: in fact it
includes all those terms which refer to inborn capacity
or incapacity. Such things are not predicated
of a person in virtue of his disposition, but in virtue
of his inborn capacity or incapacity to do something
with ease or to avoid defeat of any kind. Persons
are called good boxers or good runners, not in virtue
of such and such a disposition, but in virtue of an
inborn capacity to accomplish something with ease.
Men are called healthy in virtue of the inborn capacity
of easy resistance to those unhealthy influences that
may ordinarily arise; unhealthy, in virtue of the
lack of this capacity. Similarly with regard to
softness and hardness. Hardness is predicated
of a thing because it has that capacity of resistance
which enables it to withstand disintegration; softness,
again, is predicated of a thing by reason of the lack
of that capacity.
A third class within this category
is that of affective qualities and affections.
Sweetness, bitterness, sourness, are examples of this
sort of quality, together with all that is akin to
these; heat, moreover, and cold, whiteness, and blackness
are affective qualities. It is evident that these
are qualities, for those things that possess them
are themselves said to be such and such by reason
of their presence. Honey is called sweet because
it contains sweetness; the body is called white because
it contains whiteness; and so in all other cases.
The term ‘affective quality’
is not used as indicating that those things which
admit these qualities are affected in any way.
Honey is not called sweet because it is affected in
a specific way, nor is this what is meant in any other
instance. Similarly heat and cold are called
affective qualities, not because those things which
admit them are affected. What is meant is that
these said qualities are capable of producing an ‘affection’
in the way of perception. For sweetness has the
power of affecting the sense of taste; heat, that
of touch; and so it is with the rest of these qualities.
Whiteness and blackness, however,
and the other colours, are not said to be affective
qualities in this sense, but -because they themselves
are the results of an affection. It is plain that
many changes of colour take place because of affections.
When a man is ashamed, he blushes; when he is afraid,
he becomes pale, and so on. So true is this,
that when a man is by nature liable to such affections,
arising from some concomitance of elements in his
constitution, it is a probable inference that he has
the corresponding complexion of skin. For the
same disposition of bodily elements, which in the
former instance was momentarily present in the case
of an access of shame, might be a result of a man’s
natural temperament, so as to produce the corresponding
colouring also as a natural characteristic. All
conditions, therefore, of this kind, if caused by
certain permanent and lasting affections, are called
affective qualities. For pallor and duskiness
of complexion are called qualities, inasmuch as we
are said to be such and such in virtue of them, not
only if they originate in natural constitution, but
also if they come about through long disease or sunburn,
and are difficult to remove, or indeed remain throughout
life. For in the same way we are said to be such
and such because of these.
Those conditions, however, which arise
from causes which may easily be rendered ineffective
or speedily removed, are called, not qualities, but
affections: for we are not said to be such virtue
of them. The man who blushes through shame is
not said to be a constitutional blusher, nor is the
man who becomes pale through fear said to be constitutionally
pale. He is said rather to have been affected.
Thus such conditions are called affections,
not qualities. In like manner there are affective
qualities and affections of the soul. That temper
with which a man is born and which has its origin
in certain deep-seated affections is called a quality.
I mean such conditions as insanity, irascibility,
and so on: for people are said to be mad or irascible
in virtue of these. Similarly those abnormal
psychic states which are not inborn, but arise from
the concomitance of certain other elements, and are
difficult to remove, or altogether permanent, are called
qualities, for in virtue of them men are said to be
such and such.
Those, however, which arise from causes
easily rendered ineffective are called affections,
not qualities. Suppose that a man is irritable
when vexed: he is not even spoken of as a bad-tempered
man, when in such circumstances he loses his temper
somewhat, but rather is said to be affected. Such
conditions are therefore termed, not qualities, but
affections.
The fourth sort of quality is figure
and the shape that belongs to a thing; and besides
this, straightness and curvedness and any other qualities
of this type; each of these defines a thing as being
such and such. Because it is triangular or quadrangular
a thing is said to have a specific character, or again
because it is straight or curved; in fact a thing’s
shape in every case gives rise to a qualification
of it.
Rarity and density, roughness and
smoothness, seem to be terms indicating quality:
yet these, it would appear, really belong to a class
different from that of quality. For it is rather
a certain relative position of the parts composing
the thing thus qualified which, it appears, is indicated
by each of these terms. A thing is dense, owing
to the fact that its parts are closely combined with
one another; rare, because there are interstices between
the parts; smooth, because its parts lie, so to speak,
evenly; rough, because some parts project beyond others.
There may be other sorts of quality,
but those that are most properly so called have, we
may safely say, been enumerated.
These, then, are qualities, and the
things that take their name from them as derivatives,
or are in some other way dependent on them, are said
to be qualified in some specific way. In most,
indeed in almost all cases, the name of that which
is qualified is derived from that of the quality.
Thus the terms ‘whiteness’, ‘grammar’,
‘justice’, give us the adjectives ‘white’,
‘grammatical’, ‘just’, and
so on.
There are some cases, however, in
which, as the quality under consideration has no name,
it is impossible that those possessed of it should
have a name that is derivative. For instance,
the name given to the runner or boxer, who is so called
in virtue of an inborn capacity, is not derived from
that of any quality; for lob those capacities have
no name assigned to them. In this, the inborn
capacity is distinct from the science, with reference
to which men are called, e.g. boxers or wrestlers.
Such a science is classed as a disposition; it has
a name, and is called ‘boxing’ or ‘wrestling’
as the case may be, and the name given to those disposed
in this way is derived from that of the science.
Sometimes, even though a name exists for the quality,
that which takes its character from the quality has
a name that is not a derivative. For instance,
the upright man takes his character from the possession
of the quality of integrity, but the name given him
is not derived from the word ‘integrity’.
Yet this does not occur often.
We may therefore state that those
things are said to be possessed of some specific quality
which have a name derived from that of the aforesaid
quality, or which are in some other way dependent
on it.
One quality may be the contrary of
another; thus justice is the contrary of injustice,
whiteness of blackness, and so on. The things,
also, which are said to be such and such in virtue
of these qualities, may be contrary the one to the
other; for that which is unjust is contrary to that
which is just, that which is white to that which is
black. This, however, is not always the case.
Red, yellow, and such colours, though qualities, have
no contraries.
If one of two contraries is a quality,
the other will also be a quality. This will be
evident from particular instances, if we apply the
names used to denote the other categories; for instance,
granted that justice is the contrary of injustice and
justice is a quality, injustice will also be a quality:
neither quantity, nor relation, nor place, nor indeed
any other category but that of quality, will be applicable
properly to injustice. So it is with all other
contraries falling under the category of quality.
Qualities admit of variation of degree.
Whiteness is predicated of one thing in a greater
or less degree than of another. This is also
the case with reference to justice. Moreover,
one and the same thing may exhibit a quality in a
greater degree than it did before: if a thing
is white, it may become whiter.
Though this is generally the case,
there are exceptions. For if we should say that
justice admitted of variation of degree, difficulties
might ensue, and this is true with regard to all those
qualities which are dispositions. There are some,
indeed, who dispute the possibility of variation here.
They maintain that justice and health cannot very
well admit of variation of degree themselves, but
that people vary in the degree in which they possess
these qualities, and that this is the case with grammatical
learning and all those qualities which are classed
as dispositions. However that may be, it is an
incontrovertible fact that the things which in virtue
of these qualities are said to be what they are vary
in the degree in which they possess them; for one
man is said to be better versed in grammar, or more
healthy or just, than another, and so on.
The qualities expressed by the terms
‘triangular’ and ‘quadrangular’
do not appear to admit of variation of degree, nor
indeed do any that have to do with figure. For
those things to which the definition of the triangle
or circle is applicable are all equally triangular
or circular. Those, on the other hand, to which
the same definition is not applicable, cannot be said
to differ from one another in degree; the square is
no more a circle than the rectangle, for to neither
is the definition of the circle appropriate.
In short, if the definition of the term proposed is
not applicable to both objects, they cannot be compared.
Thus it is not all qualities which admit of variation
of degree.
Whereas none of the characteristics
I have mentioned are peculiar to quality, the fact
that likeness and unlikeness can be predicated with
reference to quality only, gives to that category
its distinctive feature. One thing is like another
only with reference to that in virtue of which it
is such and such; thus this forms the peculiar mark
of quality.
We must not be disturbed because it
may be argued that, though proposing to discuss the
category of quality, we have included in it many relative
terms. We did say that habits and dispositions
were relative. In practically all such cases the
genus is relative, the individual not. Thus knowledge,
as a genus, is explained by reference to something
else, for we mean a knowledge of something. But
particular branches of knowledge are not thus explained.
The knowledge of grammar is not relative to anything
external, nor is the knowledge of music, but these,
if relative at all, are relative only in virtue of
their genera; thus grammar is said be the knowledge
of something, not the grammar of something; similarly
music is the knowledge of something, not the music
of something.
Thus individual branches of knowledge
are not relative. And it is because we possess
these individual branches of knowledge that we are
said to be such and such. It is these that we
actually possess: we are called experts because
we possess knowledge in some particular branch.
Those particular branches, therefore, of knowledge,
in virtue of which we are sometimes said to be such
and such, are themselves qualities, and are not relative.
Further, if anything should happen to fall within both
the category of quality and that of relation, there
would be nothing extraordinary in classing it under
both these heads.