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<TEI.2><text><body><div1 n="2" type="Book" org="uniform" sample="complete"><p><milestone n="993b" unit="section" /><milestone n="1" ed="Bekker" unit="line" />each
					thinker makes some statement about the natural world, and as an
					individual contributes little or nothing to the inquiry; but a
					combination of all conjectures results in something
					considerable.<milestone n="1.2" ed="P" unit="Loeb chap" />Thus in
					so far as it seems that Truth is like the proverbial door which no one
					can miss,<note resp="Tredennick" anchored="yes" place="unspecified">Leutsch and
						Schneidewin, <title>Paroemiographi</title>, 2.678.</note> in
					this sense our study will be easy; but the fact that we cannot,
					although having some grasp of the whole, grasp a particular part,
					shows its difficulty. However, since difficulty also can be accounted
					for in two ways, its cause may exist not in the objects of our study
					but in ourselves:<milestone n="1.3" ed="P" unit="Loeb chap" />just as
					it is with bats' eyes in respect of daylight, so it is with our mental
					intelligence in respect of those things which are by nature most
					obvious.<milestone ed="P" unit="para" />It is only fair to be
					grateful not only to those whose views we can share but also to those
					who have expressed rather superficial opinions. They too have
					contributed something; by their preliminary work they have formed our
					mental experience.<milestone n="1.4" ed="P" unit="Loeb chap" />If there
					had been no Timotheus,<note resp="Tredennick" anchored="yes" place="unspecified">Of
						<placeName key="perseus,Miletus" authname="perseus,Miletus">Miletus</placeName>, 446
						(?)—<date value="-357" authname="-357">357</date> B.C.</note> we
					should not possess much of our music; and if there had been no
					Phrynis,<note resp="Tredennick" anchored="yes" place="unspecified">Of <placeName key="perseus,Mytilene" authname="perseus,Mytilene">Mytilene</placeName>; he is referred to
						as still alive in <bibl n="Aristoph. Cl. 971" default="NO" valid="yes">Aristoph. Cl. 971</bibl>. Both
						Phrynis and Timotheus are criticized in the fragment of
						Pherecrates <title>Chiron</title>translated by
						Rogers in the appendix to
						his ed. of the <title>Clouds</title>.</note> there would have
					been no Timotheus. It is just the same in the case of those who have
					theorized about reality: we have derived certain views from some of
					them, and they in turn were indebted to others.<milestone ed="P" unit="para" /><milestone n="1.5" ed="P" unit="Loeb chap" />Moreover, philosophy is rightly called<milestone n="20" ed="Bekker" unit="line" />a knowledge of Truth. The object of theoretic
					knowledge is truth, while that of practical knowledge is action; for
					even when they are investigating <emph>how</emph> a thing is so,
					practical men study not the eternal principle but the relative and
					immediate application.<milestone n="1.6" ed="P" unit="Loeb chap" />But
					we cannot know the truth apart from the cause. Now every thing through
					which a common quality is communicated to other things is itself of
					all those things in the highest degree possessed of that quality (e.g.
					fire is hottest, because it is the cause of heat in everything else);
					hence that also is most true which causes all subsequent things to be
					true.<milestone n="1.7" ed="P" unit="Loeb chap" />Therefore in
					every case the first principles of things must necessarily be true
					above everything else—since they are not merely
					<emph>sometimes</emph> true, nor is anything the cause of their
					existence, but they are the cause of the existence of other
					things,—and so as each thing is in respect of existence, so
					it is in respect of truth. </p></div1></body></text></TEI.2>