Page 140 of Various Works


  It is hence also clear why respiring animals are suffocated in water

  and fishes in air. For it is by water in the latter class, by air in

  the former that refrigeration is effected, and either of these means

  of performing the function is removed by a change of environment.

  There is also to be explained in either case the cause of the

  cause of the motion of the gills and of the lungs, the rise and fall

  of which effects the admission and expulsion of the breath or of

  water. The following, moreover, is the manner of the constitution of

  the organ.

  26

  In connexion with the heart there are three phenomena, which, though

  apparently of the same nature, are really not so, namely

  palpitation, pulsation, and respiration.

  Palpitation is the rushing together of the hot substance in the

  heart owing to the chilling influence of residual or waste products.

  It occurs, for example, in the ailment known as 'spasms' and in

  other diseases. It occurs also in fear, for when one is afraid the

  upper parts become cold, and the hot substance, fleeing away, by its

  concentration in the heart produces palpitation. It is crushed into so

  small a space that sometimes life is extinguished, and the animals die

  of the fright and morbid disturbance.

  The beating of the heart, which, as can be seen, goes on

  continuously, is similar to the throbbing of an abscess. That,

  however, is accompanied by pain, because the change produced in the

  blood is unnatural, and it goes on until the matter formed by

  concoction is discharged. There is a similarity between this

  phenomenon and that of boiling; for boiling is due to the

  volatilization of fluid by heat and the expansion consequent on

  increase of bulk. But in an abscess, if there is no evaporation

  through the walls, the process terminates in suppuration due to the

  thickening of the liquid, while in boiling it ends in the escape of

  the fluid out of the containing vessel.

  In the heart the beating is produced by the heat expanding the

  fluid, of which the food furnishes a constant supply. It occurs when

  the fluid rises to the outer wall of the heart, and it goes on

  continuously; for there is a constant flow of the fluid that goes to

  constitute the blood, it being in the heart that the blood receives

  its primary elaboration. That this is so we can perceive in the

  initial stages of generation, for the heart can be seen to contain

  blood before the veins become distinct. This explains why pulsation in

  youth exceeds that in older people, for in the young the formation

  of vapour is more abundant.

  All the veins pulse, and do so simultaneously with each other, owing

  to their connexion with the heart. The heart always beats, and hence

  they also beat continuously and simultaneously with each other and

  with it.

  Palpitation, then, is the recoil of the heart against the

  compression due to cold; and pulsation is the volatilization of the

  heated fluid.

  27

  Respiration takes place when the hot substance which is the seat

  of the nutritive principle increases. For it, like the rest of the

  body, requires nutrition, and more so than the members, for it is

  through it that they are nourished. But when it increases it

  necessarily causes the organ to rise. This organ we must to be

  constructed like the bellows in a smithy, for both heart and lungs

  conform pretty well to this shape. Such a structure must be double,

  for the nutritive principle must be situated in the centre of the

  natural force.

  Thus on increase of bulk expansion results, which necessarily causes

  the surrounding parts to rise. Now this can be seen to occur when

  people respire; they raise their chest because the motive principle of

  the organ described resident within the chest causes an identical

  expansion of this organ. When it dilates the outer air must rush in as

  into a bellows, and, being cold, by its chilling influence reduces

  by extinction the excess of the fire. But, as the increase of bulk

  causes the organ to dilate, so diminution causes contraction, and when

  it collapses the air which entered must pass out again. When it enters

  the air is cold, but on issuing it is warm owing to its contact with

  the heat resident in this organ, and this is specially the case in

  those animals that possess a full-blooded lung. The numerous

  canal-like ducts in the lung, into which it passes, have each a

  blood-vessel lying alongside, so that the whole lung is thought to

  be full of blood. The inward passage of the air is called respiration,

  the outward expiration, and this double movement goes on

  continuously just so long as the animal lives and keeps this organ

  in continuous motion; it is for this reason that life is bound up with

  the passage of the breath outwards and inwards.

  It is in the same way that the motion of the gills in fishes takes

  place. When the hot substance in the blood throughout the members

  rises, the gills rise too, and let the water pass through, but when it

  is chilled and retreats through its channels to the heart, they

  contract and eject the water. Continually as the heat in the heart

  rises, continually on being chilled it returns thither again. Hence,

  as in respiring animals life and death are bound up with

  respiration, so in the other animals class they depend on the

  admission of water.

  Our discussion of life and death and kindred topics is now

  practically complete. But health and discase also claim the

  attention of the scientist, and not mercly of the physician, in so far

  as an account of their causes is concerned. The extent to which

  these two differ and investigate diverse provinces must not escape us,

  since facts show that their inquiries are, to a certain extent, at

  least conterminous. For physicians of culture and refinement make some

  mention of natural science, and claim to derive their principles

  from it, while the most accomplished investigators into nature

  generally push their studies so far as to conclude with an account

  of medical principles.

  -THE END-

  .

 


 

  Aristotle, Various Works

 


 

 
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