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Aristotle - On The Parts Of Animals
Atec Февраль 16 2008 20:01:06
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. Standing thus erect, man has no need of legs in front,
and in their stead has been endowed by nature with arms and hands. Now
it is the opinion of Anaxagoras that the possession of these hands
is the cause of man being of all animals the most intelligent. But
it is more rational to suppose that his endowment with hands is the
consequence rather than the cause of his superior intelligence. For
the hands are instruments or organs, and the invariable plan of nature
in distributing the organs is to give each to such animal as can
make use of it; nature acting in this matter as any prudent man
would do. For it is a better plan to take a person who is already a
flute-player and give him a flute, than to take one who possesses a
flute and teach him the art of flute-playing. For nature adds that
which is less to that which is greater and more important, and not
that which is more valuable and greater to that which is less.
Seeing then that such is the better course, and seeing also that of
what is possible nature invariably brings about the best, we must
conclude that man does not owe his superior intelligence to his hands,
but his hands to his superior intelligence. For the most intelligent
of animals is the one who would put the most organs to use; and the
hand is not to be looked on as one organ but as many; for it is, as it
were, an instrument for further instruments. This instrument,
therefore,-the hand-of all instruments the most variously serviceable,
has been given by nature to man, the animal of all animals the most
capable of acquiring the most varied handicrafts
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