Chapter VI.—Everything that is Useless or Hurtful is Rejected.
Since, therefore, great difference of nature obtains
in all animals, and the very nourishment which is accordant with nature
is varied to suit each kind of animal, and the body which is nourished;
and as in the nourishment of every animal there is a threefold cleansing
and separation, it follows that whatever is alien from the nourishment
of the animal must be wholly destroyed and carried off to its natural
place, or change into something else, since it cannot coalesce with it;
that the power of the nourishing body must be suitable to the nature of
the animal to be nourished, and accordant with its powers; and that this,
when it has passed
152through the strainers appointed
for the purpose, and been thoroughly purified by the natural
means of purification, must become a most genuine addition to the
substance,—the only thing, in fact, which any one calling things
by their right names would call nourishment at all; because it rejects
everything that is foreign and hurtful to the constitution of the animal
nourished and that mass of superfluous food introduced merely for filling
the stomach and gratifying the appetite. This nourishment, no one can
doubt, becomes incorporated with the body that is nourished, interwoven
and blended with all the members and parts of members; but that which is
different and contrary to nature is speedily corrupted if brought into
contact with a stronger power, but easily destroys that which is overcome
by it, and is converted into hurtful humours and poisonous qualities,
because producing nothing akin or friendly to the body which is to be
nourished. And it is a very clear proof of this, that in many of the
animals nourished, pain, or disease, or death follows from these things,
if, owing to a too keen appetite, they take in mingled with their food
something poisonous and contrary to nature; which, of course, would tend
to the utter destruction of the body to be nourished, since that which
is nourished is nourished by substances akin to it and which accord with
its nature, but is destroyed by those of a contrary kind. If, therefore,
according to the different nature of animals, different kinds of food
have been provided suitable to their nature, and none of that which the
animal may have taken, not even an accidental part of it, admits of being
blended with the body which is nourished, but only that part which has
been purified by an entire digestion, and undergone a complete change
for union with a particular body, and adapted to the parts which are
to receive nourishment,—it is very plain that none of the things
contrary to nature can be united with those bodies for which it is
not a suitable and correspondent nourishment, but either passes off by
the bowels before it produces some other humour, crude and corrupted;
or, if it continue for a longer time, produces suffering or disease
hard to cure, destroying at the same time the natural nourishment, or
even the flesh itself which needs nourishment. But even though it be
expelled at length, overcome by certain medicines, or by better food,
or by the natural forces, it is not got rid of without doing much harm,
since it bears no peaceful aspect towards what is natural, because it
cannot coalesce with nature.