Yet, suppose someone among us should say that the act of seeing is chance and not vision nor the use of light-bringing orbs, as Plato In the Timaeus , p. 45 B. calls the eyes, and that the act of hearing is chance and not a faculty apperceptive of a vibration in the air which is carried onward through ear and brain. Cf. Plato, Timaeus , p. 67 B. If such were the case, it were well for us, as it appears, to beware of trusting our senses! But, as a matter of fact, Nature has conferred upon us sight, hearing, taste, smell, and our other members and their faculties to be ministers of sagacity and intelligence, and Mind has sight and mind has hearing; all the rest is deaf and blind. From Epicharmus; cited by Plutarch also in Moralia , 33 B and 961 A. Cf. Diels, Fragmente der Vorsokratiker , i. p. 123. Precisely as would be our case if the sun did not exist, and we, for all the other stars, should be passing our life in a continual night, as Heracleitus Diels, Fragmente der Vorsokratiker , i, p. 97; Bywater, p. 13. A slightly different version of the saying is given by Plutarch, Moralia , 957 A. affirms, so man, for all his senses, had he not mind and reason, would not differ at all in his life from the brutes. But as it is, we excel them and have power over them, not from chance or accidentally, but the cause thereof is Prometheus, or, in other words, the power to think and reason, Which gives the foal of horse and ass, and get Of bull, to serve us and assume our tasks, as Aeschylus From the Prometheus Unbound of Aeschylus; Nauck, Trag. Graec. Frag. , Aeschylus, No. 194. The lines are again quoted by Plutarch Moralia , 964 F. puts it. Certainly, in so far as chance and nature’s endowment at birth are concerned, the great majority of brute animals are better off than man. For some are armed with horns, or teeth, or stings, and Empedocles says, But as for hedgehogs Growing upon their backs sharp darts of spines stand bristling, Diels, Fragmente der Vorsokratiker, i. p. 252. and still others are shod and clad with scales or hair, with claws or horny hoofs. Man alone, as Plato Protagoras , 321 C. says, naked, unarmed, with feet unshod, and with no bed to lie in, has been abandoned by Nature. Yet by one gift all this she mitigates, Author unknown, but perhaps Euripides; cf. Nauck, Trag. Graec. Frag., Adespota, No. 367; cited again by Plutarch, Moralia , 959 D. the gift of reasoning, diligence, and forethought. Slight, of a truth, is the strength of man; and yet By his mind’s resourcefulness Doth he subjugate the monsters Of the deep, and the purposes Of the denizens of earth and air. From the Aeolus of Euripides; Nauck, Trag. Graec. Frag. , Euripides, No. 27. Horses are the lightest and swiftest of foot, yet they run for man. The dog is pugnacious and spirited, yet it watches over man. Fish is most savoury, and the pig very fat, yet for man they are nourishing and appetizing food. What is bigger than an elephant or more terrible to behold ? But even this creature has been made the plaything of man, and a spectacle at public gatherings, and it learns to posture and dance and kneel. Plutarch has several good stories about elephants in Moralia , 968 ff. Such presentations are not without their use; indeed, they serve a purpose in that we may learn to what heights man’s intelligence raises him, above what it places him, and how he is master of all things, and in every way superior. No, we are not invincible either in boxing or wrestling, Nor are we swift in the race. Adapted from Homer, Od. viii. 246. Indeed, in all these matters we are not so fortunate as the animals; yet we make use of experience, memory, wisdom, and skill, as Anaxagoras Cf. Diels, Fragmente der Vorsokratiker , i. p. 409. says, which are ours, and ours only, and we take their honey, and milk them, and carry and lead them at will, taking entire control over them. In all this, therefore, there is no element of chance at all, but solely and wholly sagacity and forethought. Moreover, under the head of man’s ways Cf. the first line of chap. i. supra. would fall, no doubt, the activities of carpenters, copper-smiths, builders, and statuaries, wherein we see nothing brought to a successful conclusion accidentally or as it chances. That chance may sometimes contribute slightly to their success, From Epicurus; cf. the quotation in Diogenes Laertius, x. 144. but that the arts through themselves bring to perfection the most and greatest of their works, is plainly suggested by this poet: Into the highway come, all craftsmen folk, Who worship Labour, stern-eyed child of Zeus, With sacred baskets placed about. Perhaps from Sophocles; cf. Nauck, Trag. Graec. Frag. , Sophocles, No. 760. )Ἐργάνη is an epithet applied to Athena as patron of the arts. For the arts have Labour, that is Athena, and not Chance as their coadjutor. Of just one artist, Nealces, according to Pliny, Nat. Hist. xxxv. 36 (104). Dio Chrysostom ( Or. lxiii. 4) says it was Apelles, and Valerius Maximus (viii. 11. 7) says a famous painter. however, it is related that in painting a horse he had succeeded in nearly every respect in the drawing and colours, but the frothy appearance of the foam from champing the bit, and the rush of the foamflecked breath, he had tried again and again to paint, but without success, and each time had wiped it out, until finally, in a rage, he threw his sponge just as it was, full of pigments, at the canvas, and this, as it struck, transferred its contents in some amazing manner to the canvas, and effected the desired result. This is the only recorded instance of a technical achievement due to chance. Rulers, weights, measures, and numbers are everywhere in use, so that the random and haphazard may find no place in any production. Indeed, the arts are said to be minor forms of intelligence, or rather offshoots of intelligence, and detached fragments of it interspersed amid life’s common necessities, as it is said in the allegory regarding fire, that it was divided into portions by Prometheus and scattered some here and some there. For thus, when intelligence is finely broken and divided, small portions and fragments of it have gone to their several stations.