6. The Ten Categories and their Enumeration
Summary
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Lecture Notes
Main Topics #
The Enumeration of the Ten Categories (Chapter 4) #
Aristotle enumerates ten highest genera without intertwining (ἀδιαπλόκως), each signifying either:
Substance (οὐσία): What a thing is
- Examples: man, horse
- Individual substances (this man, this horse) are most known to us
- Singular substance is primary; universal substances (genera and species) are said of singulars
Quantity (ποσόν - concrete, not abstract ποσότης): How much or how many
- Examples: two cubits, three cubits long
- Both discrete and continuous quantity
- English “size” captures both meanings (size of a mountain, size of a crowd)
Quality (ποιόν - concrete, not abstract ποιότης): How/what sort
- Examples: white (λευκόν), grammatical (γραμματικόν)
- One sensible/bodily (white), one in the soul (grammatical knowledge)
- Shows breadth of the category
Relation (πρός τι): Toward something (ad aliquum in Latin)
- Examples: double, half, greater
- Concrete relational language preserves the accidental character
- Critical for understanding Trinitarian theology
Place (ποῦ): Where
- Examples: in the Lyceum (private), in the marketplace/agora (public)
- NOT to be confused with the abstract “place”
Time (ποτέ): When
- Examples: yesterday, last year
- NOT to be confused with abstract “time”
Position (κεῖσθαι): How positioned/laid out
- Examples: sitting, lying down
- Latin: situs
Having (ἔχειν): To have
- Examples: shod, armed, clothed
- Latin: habitus
- Distinction: “I am white” (quality) vs. “I have white” (having)
Acting (ποιεῖν): Acting upon
- Examples: cutting, burning, warming
- Distinction: “warm” (quality) vs. “warming” (acting upon)
Undergoing (πάσχειν): Being acted upon/suffering
- Examples: being cut, being burned, being warmed
- Distinction between the property and the activity
Aristotle’s Deliberate Use of Concrete Terminology #
Berquist emphasizes that Aristotle uses concrete terms rather than abstract nouns:
- ποσόν (how much/many) not ποσότης (quantity)
- ποιόν (how) not ποιότης (quality)
- πρός τι (toward something) not σχέσις (relation)
Why this matters:
- Concrete language emphasizes the accidental character (accidents exist in another)
- Abstract terms might suggest substances rather than accidents
- Denominative (concrete) forms better capture the nature of accidents
- Roman Kassurik pointed this out as crucial for philosophical understanding
Why Examples Matter #
Berquist’s teacher, Roman Kassurik, taught: “You can tell a man’s understanding of the matter by the examples he chooses.”
Why Aristotle chooses man before horse:
- Man is most known to us (it is ourselves)
- Horse is closer to man than tree or stone
- Shows understanding of what is manifest to human knowledge
- Stone’s unity is questionable; trees can be grafted
Why Aristotle chooses his specific examples of each category:
- They demonstrate order and intelligence
- Sensible examples come first (e.g., white before grammatical)
- Examples show breadth (e.g., private place [Lyceum] and public place [agora])
The Translation Problem #
Berquist criticizes modern English translations for using abstract terms where concrete ones are needed:
- “Where” not “place”
- “When” not “time” (place and time are themselves quantities)
- “Acting upon” not “action”
- “Undergoing” not “passion”
Example of mistranslation consequences: If you translate πρός as “relation” instead of the concrete “toward,” you lose the force of John 1:1 (“the Word was toward God”) for understanding Trinitarian relations.
Connection to Trinitarian Theology #
The concrete relational language is critical:
- John 1:1: “the Word was toward God (πρὸς τὸν θεόν)”
- This is the same πρός Aristotle uses for relation
- Persons of the Trinity are distinguished by relations—by how they are toward each other
- The Son is toward (πρός) the Father; the Father is Father to the Son
- The Holy Spirit’s relation differs: proceeding from Father and Son (like breath), not as a Son
- Concrete “toward-ness” captures this better than abstract “relation”
Three Parts of the Categories (Latin Division) #
- Ante-Predicamenta (before the predicaments): Chapters 1-4
- Prepares understanding before taking up categories one by one
- Predicamenta (the predicaments): Chapters 5 onward
- Takes up each category in detail (substance, quantity, quality, relation mainly)
- Brief treatment of last six categories
- Post-Predicamenta: Will be discussed later
Key Arguments #
Why Substance is the First Category #
- Individual substances are what individual accidents exist in
- Everything else is said of or exists in individual substances
- The categories are distinguished by how something is said of individual substances
- Substance is neither in a subject nor said of a subject (it is primary)
Why Aristotle Enumerates These Ten (Not More, Not Fewer) #
Implicit in the lecture:
- Names said without intertwining each signify one of these categories
- These are the highest genera
- No genus above them (would require infinite regress)
- Each has its own order and character
The Principle of Order Across Categories #
- Whatever is said of the predicate is said of the subject
- But this ordering differs between categories:
- Ordered genera (like substance: individual → universal): same differences apply down the line
- Different genera (like animal and science): differences don’t transfer across unordered genera
- Footed, two-footed are differences of animal, not of science
Truth and Being in Simple Terms #
- Things said without intertwining (like “man,” “white,” “runs”) are neither true nor false
- Only composition/separation (κατάφασις) of terms produces truth or falsity
- “What is, is” (being true); “what is not, is not” (also being true)
- “What is, is not” or “what is not, is” (both false)
- Simple terms themselves lack truth-value
Important Definitions #
Οὐσία (Substance): What a thing is; can be either individual substance (singular, atoma) or universal substance (genus or species)
ποσόν (How much/many): Concrete quantity term; emphasizes the accidental character
ποιόν (How): Concrete quality term; what sort of thing
πρός τι (Toward something): Relation as concretely understood; what something is directed or related to
ποῦ (Where): Place, understood concretely—not as the abstract “place” but as location
ποτέ (When): Time, understood concretely—not as abstract time but as temporal position
κεῖσθαι (Keisthai): Position, attitude, or how something is laid out; Latin situs
ἔχειν (Echein): To have; possessing something (e.g., shod with shoes); Latin habitus
ποιεῖν (Poiein): Acting upon; doing something to another (cutting, burning)
πάσχειν (Paschein): Undergoing; being acted upon; suffering an action
Κατάφασις (Kataphasis): Composition/combination of terms that produces a statement capable of being true or false
Λόγος (Logos): In the context of definition, the rational account of something
Examples & Illustrations #
Substance #
- Man and horse (chosen because they are closest to us and have clear unity)
- Not stone or tree (whose unity is questionable)
- Individual substances (this man, this horse) vs. universal substances (man, animal, living body, substance)
Quantity #
- Two cubits long, three cubits long
- Size of a mountain (continuous), size of a crowd (discrete)
- Both captured by the single English term “size”
Quality #
- White (λευκόν)—sensible, bodily quality
- Grammatical (γραμματικόν)—quality in the soul
- Shows the category’s breadth (bodily and mental qualities)
Relation #
- Double, half, greater
- All obvious examples from quantity-based relations
Place #
- In the Lyceum (private place)
- In the Agora/marketplace (public place)
- Shows a distinction between private and public
Time #
- Yesterday (recent past, more clear)
- Last year (more distant past)
Position #
- Sitting, lying down
Having #
- Being shod (having shoes)
- Being armed (having armor)
- Being clothed (having clothes)
Acting & Undergoing #
- Cutting / being cut
- Burning / being burned
- Warming / being warmed
- Kicking / being kicked
The Lyceum #
- Aristotle’s school, named from which his learning place was called
- Modern French “lycée” derives from it
- Academy (Plato’s school) is more famous historically
- Movie theaters once called “Lyceum” show Aristotle’s declining cultural presence
Ronald Reagan’s Film #
- Illustrated the sense of losing part of one’s substance (“Where’s the rest of me?”)
- Shows how substance (individual man) is more known to us than accidents
Notable Quotes #
“You can tell a man’s understanding of the matter by the examples he chooses.” — Roman Kassurik
“Until translators are philosophers or philosophers are translators, you’ll have bad translations.” — Duane Berquist (paraphrasing Plato)
“Compared to Aristotle, I have the brain of an angleworm.” — Roman Kassurik
“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was toward God” — Gospel of John 1:1 (πρὸς τὸν θεόν, using the same πρός as Aristotle’s category of relation)
“He said, you’re going to be a philosopher, you take Greek.” — Roman Kassurik to young Duane Berquist
Questions Addressed #
Why Does Aristotle Use Concrete Terms Rather Than Abstract Ones? #
- To preserve the sense that these are accidents (things that exist in another)
- Abstract terms like “quantity” and “quality” sound like substances themselves
- Concrete terms (“how much,” “how”) emphasize the accidental character better
- This reflects more accurate philosophical understanding
Why Are Man and Horse Chosen as Primary Examples of Substance? #
- Man is most known to us (we are men)
- Horse is closer to man than stone or tree
- Shows Aristotle’s understanding of what is manifest to human knowledge
- Contrasts with stone (unclear unity) and tree (can be grafted, lacks clear unity)
Why Does the Lyceum No Longer Dominate as Aristotle’s School? #
- Berquist notes Plato’s Academy is more famous in modern culture
- The term “Lycée” for French schools preserves the name
- But “movie theaters” called the Lyceum suggest declining philosophical association
- Reflects broader cultural shift away from Aristotelian philosophy
How Do Categories Relate to Trinitarian Theology? #
- Persons of the Trinity are distinguished by relations (πρός τι)
- The Son is “toward” (πρός) the Father; the Father is “Father to” the Son
- The Holy Spirit’s relation is different: proceeding from Father and Son (breathing)
- Understanding Aristotle’s concrete πρός language illuminates John 1:1
- Without this understanding, translations lose critical theological meaning
What Is the Difference Between “Warm” and “Warming”? #
- Warm: A quality (ποιόν)
- Warming: Acting upon (ποιεῖν)—the activity of making something warm
- Sitting by a fire, I am being warmed (undergoing, πάσχειν)
- The fire is warming me (acting upon, ποιεῖν)
- Precise language requires distinguishing the property from the activity
How Does Simple/Unseparated Language Relate to Truth and Falsehood? #
- Simple terms like “man,” “white,” “runs” by themselves are neither true nor false
- Only when combined into statements (κατάφασις) does truth/falsehood arise
- “What is, is” = true statement
- “What is not, is not” = also true statement
- “What is, is not” = false statement
- This reflects the composition required for truth-value
Parenthetical Observations #
Berquist notes that Aristotle’s method in the Categories differs from modern philosophers:
- Modern philosophers might not order examples meaningfully
- Aristotle and Thomas always show order and intelligence in examples
- The choice of examples reveals the philosopher’s understanding
- Careful attention to examples is therefore philosophically important