登陆注册
19461600000038

第38章

Those bodies admit of softening which are not (like ice) made up of water, but in which earth predominates. All their moisture must not have left them (as in the case of natron and salt), nor must the relation of dry to moist in them be incongruous (as in the case of pottery). They must be tractile (without admitting water) or malleable (without consisting of water), and the agent in softening them is fire. Such are iron and horn.

Both of bodies that can melt and of bodies that cannot, some do and some do not admit of softening in water. Copper, for instance, which can be melted, cannot be softened in water, whereas wool and earth can be softened in water, for they can be soaked. (It is true that though copper can be melted the agent in its case is not water, but some of the bodies that can be melted by water too such as natron and salt cannot be softened in water: for nothing is said to be so affected unless the water soaks into it and makes it softer.)Some things, on the other hand, such as wool and grain, can be softened by water though they cannot be melted. Any body that is to be softened by water must be of earth and must have its pores larger than the particles of water, and the pores themselves must be able to resist the action of water, whereas bodies that can be 'melted' by water must have pores throughout.

(Why is it that earth is both 'melted' and softened by moisture, while natron is 'melted' but not softened? Because natron is pervaded throughout by pores so that the parts are immediately divided by the water, but earth has also pores which do not connect and is therefore differently affected according as the water enters by one or the other set of pores.)Some bodies can be bent or straightened, like the reed or the withy, some cannot, like pottery and stone. Those bodies are apt to be bent and straightened which can change from being curved to being straight and from being straight to being curved, and bending and straightening consist in the change or motion to the straight or to a curve, for a thing is said to be in process of being bent whether it is being made to assume a convex or a concave shape. So bending is defined as motion to the convex or the concave without a change of length. For if we added 'or to the straight', we should have a thing bent and straight at once, and it is impossible for that which is straight to be bent. And if all bending is a bending back or a bending down, the former being a change to the convex, the latter to the concave, a motion that leads to the straight cannot be called bending, but bending and straightening are two different things. These, then, are the things that can, and those that cannot be bent, and be straightened.

Some things can be both broken and comminuted, others admit only one or the other. Wood, for instance, can be broken but not comminuted, ice and stone can be comminuted but not broken, while pottery may either be comminuted or broken. The distinction is this: breaking is a division and separation into large parts, comminution into parts of any size, but there must be more of them than two. Now those solids that have many pores not communicating with one another are comminuible (for the limit to their subdivision is set by the pores), but those whose pores stretch continuously for a long way are breakable, while those which have pores of both kinds are both comminuible and breakable.

Some things, e.g. copper and wax, are impressible, others, e.g.

pottery and water, are not. The process of being impressed is the sinking of a part of the surface of a thing in response to pressure or a blow, in general to contact. Such bodies are either soft, like wax, where part of the surface is depressed while the rest remains, or hard, like copper. Non-impressible bodies are either hard, like pottery (its surface does not give way and sink in), or liquid, like water (for though water does give way it is not in a part of it, for there is a reciprocal change of place of all its parts). Those impressibles that retain the shape impressed on them and are easily moulded by the hand are called 'plastic'; those that are not easily moulded, such as stone or wood, or are easily moulded but do not retain the shape impressed, like wool or a sponge, are not plastic.

The last group are said to be 'squeezable'. Things are 'squeezable'

when they can contract into themselves under pressure, their surface sinking in without being broken and without the parts interchanging position as happens in the case of water. (We speak of pressure when there is movement and the motor remains in contact with the thing moved, of impact when the movement is due to the local movement of the motor.) Those bodies are subject to squeezing which have empty pores-empty, that is, of the stuff of which the body itself consists-and that can sink upon the void spaces within them, or rather upon their pores. For sometimes the pores upon which a body sinks in are not empty (a wet sponge, for instance, has its pores full). But the pores, if full, must be full of something softer than the body itself which is to contract. Examples of things squeezable are the sponge, wax, flesh. Those things are not squeezable which cannot be made to contract upon their own pores by pressure, either because they have no pores or because their pores are full of something too hard.

Thus iron, stone, water and all liquids are incapable of being squeezed.

Things are tractile when their surface can be made to elongate, for being drawn out is a movement of the surface, remaining unbroken, in the direction of the mover. Some things are tractile, e.g. hair, thongs, sinew, dough, birdlime, and some are not, e.g.

water, stone. Some things are both tractile and squeezable, e.g. wool;in other cases the two qualities do not coincide; phlegm, for instance, is tractile but not squeezable, and a sponge squeezable but not tractile.

同类推荐
  • 真龙虎九仙经

    真龙虎九仙经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 浙东纪略

    浙东纪略

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 律相感通传

    律相感通传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 李铁君文钞

    李铁君文钞

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 幼幼集成

    幼幼集成

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 逆绝九天

    逆绝九天

    九天之下,皆是蝼蚁。人要杀我,我必杀他。天要亡我,我必灭他。逆绝九天,霸绝天下。
  • 南守忆北望归

    南守忆北望归

    逝去的时光里,有太多的纠葛。他们从小就相识,这其中的感情不是三言两语可以说的清楚。因为她的好心,他的介入,让一切都改变了。谁会知道当初的一切,到最后竟沦为刻骨铭心的伤痛。时光流逝,她站在蔚蓝的海边,温柔的海风吹拂着她柔顺的发丝,回忆起从前,或许他们并没有错的那么离谱。他曾说过:我会在这里守着回忆,盼望着你回来……
  • 九疆域

    九疆域

    华夏九州,风起云涌,浩瀚无边,九州之上,杀人夺宝之事无时不在上演,人间风云,永不停歇。
  • 人脉历练智慧(下)

    人脉历练智慧(下)

    常言说“一个篱笆三个桩,一个好汉三个帮”,“一人成木,二人成林,三人成森林”,可见,要想做成大事,必定要有做成大事的人脉网络和人脉支持系统。如果说血脉是人的生理生命支持系统的话,那么人脉则是人的社会生命支持系统。人脉,决定发展!
  • EXO:会有奇迹吗

    EXO:会有奇迹吗

    一个是拥有各种实力和身份的女主,一个是一群天真阳光的大男孩,他们的相遇,相知,相识和相爱,必定会掀起一阵轩然大波!
  • 高调理事 低调做人

    高调理事 低调做人

    做人是每个人生存在世上的基础,也是一个人成就大事的前提,而综观古今中外,最能保全自己,发展自己和成就自己的人生之道便是“高调理事,低调做人”。高效就是在单位时间内完成最多的工作量,就是要用最小的成本,在最短的时间内实现最大的效益。不但要快,而且要好。效是一种不畏艰辛的精神,也是成功者必须具备的工作方法。高效是一种良好的习惯,也是一种头脑的清醒。只有高效才能打造一个人竟争优势,提升核心竟争力,战胜对手,赢得辉煌。
  • 恋爱写真

    恋爱写真

    他是华丽的贵族,是痴心守护爱情的王子,上帝的一次玩笑,却让他变成生活在情感回忆中的假面王子。她是奢华的钻石,是褪下虚荣光环的公主,命运的一次邂逅,却让她最终扮演在感情纠纷中的替身玩偶。对他们来说,这是上帝赐予的邂逅,又是上帝茶余饭后的玩笑。他们坚持各自的信仰,却能让对方泪如雨下……
  • 恋爱倒数100

    恋爱倒数100

    2009年5月11日7点31分,由于一公里外的火车出轨,冲上街道导致街上的大货车翻车,货车上的30头猪跑下货车满街疯跑,再致使路人甲为了躲避疯猪冲进路边的居民家,结果机缘巧合撞见正在这个人家里偷东西的小偷,小偷再沿电线杆逃跑,导致电线杆倒塌,路人乙为了躲避电线杆推了路人丙,路人丙推了路人丁······最后到路人x推了我一下。于是世界上最普通的少女卜卜被馒头噎死了!于是世界上最浪漫最搞笑的爱情故事,从此时开始倒数100天!
  • 网游之穿越英雄联盟

    网游之穿越英雄联盟

    宇龙在家里玩英雄联盟的时候无意间穿越到了英雄联盟的世界之中,宇龙并没有过人的天赋,可是却拥有着别人无法拥有的天赋技能,凭借着自己强的天赋技能宇龙能否纵横在英雄联盟的世界?能否救下自己的爱人?在与诺克萨斯的抗争中能否胜利?这一切都将拉开序幕
  • 赚大钱修大神

    赚大钱修大神

    谁说世上无神仙?张清就遇上了!谁说神仙很正经?张清就说不是!谁说神器无水货?张清就有一个!谁说捡破烂颓废?张清就能发财!谁说……都市轻松小说,纯属雷同,如有虚构,绝对意外!