Part 6
Quantity is either discrete or continuous.
Moreover, some quantities are such that each part
of the whole has a relative position to the other
parts: others have within them no such relation
of part to part.
Instances of discrete quantities are
number and speech; of continuous, lines, surfaces,
solids, and, besides these, time and place.
In the case of the parts of a number,
there is no common boundary at which they join.
For example: two fives make ten, but the two
fives have no common boundary, but are separate; the
parts three and seven also do not join at any boundary.
Nor, to generalize, would it ever be possible in the
case of number that there should be a common boundary
among the parts; they are always separate. Number,
therefore, is a discrete quantity.
The same is true of speech. That
speech is a quantity is evident: for it is measured
in long and short syllables. I mean here that
speech which is vocal. Moreover, it is a discrete
quantity for its parts have no common boundary.
There is no common boundary at which the syllables
join, but each is separate and distinct from the rest.
A line, on the other hand, is a continuous
quantity, for it is possible to find a common boundary
at which its parts join. In the case of the line,
this common boundary is the point; in the case of
the plane, it is the line: for the parts of the
plane have also a common boundary. Similarly
you can find a common boundary in the case of the
parts of a solid, namely either a line or a plane.
Space and time also belong to this
class of quantities. Time, past, present, and
future, forms a continuous whole. Space, likewise,
is a continuous quantity; for the parts of a solid
occupy a certain space, and these have a common boundary;
it follows that the parts of space also, which are
occupied by the parts of the solid, have the same
common boundary as the parts of the solid. Thus,
not only time, but space also, is a continuous quantity,
for its parts have a common boundary.
Quantities consist either of parts
which bear a relative position each to each, or of
parts which do not. The parts of a line bear
a relative position to each other, for each lies somewhere,
and it would be possible to distinguish each, and
to state the position of each on the plane and to
explain to what sort of part among the rest each was
contiguous. Similarly the parts of a plane have
position, for it could similarly be stated what was
the position of each and what sort of parts were contiguous.
The same is true with regard to the solid and to space.
But it would be impossible to show that the arts of
a number had a relative position each to each, or
a particular position, or to state what parts were
contiguous. Nor could this be done in the case
of time, for none of the parts of time has an abiding
existence, and that which does not abide can hardly
have position. It would be better to say that
such parts had a relative order, in virtue of one
being prior to another. Similarly with number:
in counting, ‘one’ is prior to ‘two’,
and ‘two’ to ‘three’, and thus
the parts of number may be said to possess a relative
order, though it would be impossible to discover any
distinct position for each. This holds good also
in the case of speech. None of its parts has
an abiding existence: when once a syllable is
pronounced, it is not possible to retain it, so that,
naturally, as the parts do not abide, they cannot
have position. Thus, some quantities consist
of parts which have position, and some of those which
have not.
Strictly speaking, only the things
which I have mentioned belong to the category of quantity:
everything else that is called quantitative is a quantity
in a secondary sense. It is because we have in
mind some one of these quantities, properly so called,
that we apply quantitative terms to other things.
We speak of what is white as large, because the surface
over which the white extends is large; we speak of
an action or a process as lengthy, because the time
covered is long; these things cannot in their own
right claim the quantitative epithet. For instance,
should any one explain how long an action was, his
statement would be made in terms of the time taken,
to the effect that it lasted a year, or something
of that sort. In the same way, he would explain
the size of a white object in terms of surface, for
he would state the area which it covered. Thus
the things already mentioned, and these alone, are
in their intrinsic nature quantities; nothing else
can claim the name in its own right, but, if at all,
only in a secondary sense.
Quantities have no contraries.
In the case of definite quantities this is obvious;
thus, there is nothing that is the contrary of ‘two
cubits long’ or of ‘three cubits long’,
or of a surface, or of any such quantities. A
man might, indeed, argue that ‘much’ was
the contrary of ‘little’, and ‘great’
of ‘small’. But these are not quantitative,
but relative; things are not great or small absolutely,
they are so called rather as the result of an act of
comparison. For instance, a mountain is called
small, a grain large, in virtue of the fact that the
latter is greater than others of its kind, the former
less. Thus there is a reference here to an external
standard, for if the terms ‘great’ and
‘small’ were used absolutely, a mountain
would never be called small or a grain large.
Again, we say that there are many people in a village,
and few in Athens, although those in the city are
many times as numerous as those in the village:
or we say that a house has many in it, and a theatre
few, though those in the theatre far outnumber those
in the house. The terms ’two cubits long,
“three cubits long,’ and so on indicate
quantity, the terms ‘great’ and ‘small’
indicate relation, for they have reference to an external
standard. It is, therefore, plain that these are
to be classed as relative.
Again, whether we define them as quantitative
or not, they have no contraries: for how can
there be a contrary of an attribute which is not to
be apprehended in or by itself, but only by reference
to something external? Again, if ‘great’
and ‘small’ are contraries, it will come
about that the same subject can admit contrary qualities
at one and the same time, and that things will themselves
be contrary to themselves. For it happens at
times that the same thing is both small and great.
For the same thing may be small in comparison with
one thing, and great in comparison with another, so
that the same thing comes to be both small and great
at one and the same time, and is of such a nature
as to admit contrary qualities at one and the same
moment. Yet it was agreed, when substance was
being discussed, that nothing admits contrary qualities
at one and the same moment. For though substance
is capable of admitting contrary qualities, yet no
one is at the same time both sick and healthy, nothing
is at the same time both white and black. Nor
is there anything which is qualified in contrary ways
at one and the same time.
Moreover, if these were contraries,
they would themselves be contrary to themselves.
For if ‘great’ is the contrary of ‘small’,
and the same thing is both great and small at the same
time, then ‘small’ or ‘great’
is the contrary of itself. But this is impossible.
The term ‘great’, therefore, is not the
contrary of the term ‘small’, nor ‘much’
of ‘little’. And even though a man
should call these terms not relative but quantitative,
they would not have contraries.
It is in the case of space that quantity
most plausibly appears to admit of a contrary.
For men define the term ‘above’ as the
contrary of ‘below’, when it is the region
at the centre they mean by ‘below’; and
this is so, because nothing is farther from the extremities
of the universe than the region at the centre.
Indeed, it seems that in defining contraries of every
kind men have recourse to a spatial metaphor, for
they say that those things are contraries which, within
the same class, are separated by the greatest possible
distance.
Quantity does not, it appears, admit
of variation of degree. One thing cannot be two
cubits long in a greater degree than another.
Similarly with regard to number: what is ‘three’
is not more truly three than what is ‘five’
is five; nor is one set of three more truly three
than another set. Again, one period of time is
not said to be more truly time than another. Nor
is there any other kind of quantity, of all that have
been mentioned, with regard to which variation of
degree can be predicated. The category of quantity,
therefore, does not admit of variation of degree.
The most distinctive mark of quantity
is that equality and inequality are predicated of
it. Each of the aforesaid quantities is said
to be equal or unequal. For instance, one solid
is said to be equal or unequal to another; number,
too, and time can have these terms applied to them,
indeed can all those kinds of quantity that have been
mentioned.
That which is not a quantity can by
no means, it would seem, be termed equal or unequal
to anything else. One particular disposition
or one particular quality, such as whiteness, is by
no means compared with another in terms of equality
and inequality but rather in terms of similarity.
Thus it is the distinctive mark of quantity that it
can be called equal and unequal.