书城公版The Categories
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第14章

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, butaffections.

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 aname 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.