more from this thinker | more from this text
Full Idea
Any kind of mixture that does not ...possess measure or the nature of proportion will necessarily corrupt its ingredients and most of all itself. For there would be no blending in such cases but really an unconnected medley, and ruin what contains it.
Gist of Idea
If a mixture does not contain measure and proportion, it is corrupted and destroyed
Source
Plato (Philebus [c.353 BCE], 64d)
Book Ref
Plato: 'Complete Works', ed/tr. Cooper,John M. [Hackett 1997], p.454
A Reaction
My guess is that Plato is thinking of the decay of living things when they die, losing the proportions of psuché, and then applying this to the unity of inanimate objects as well. One might compare Leibniz's monads.
14503 | If a mixture does not contain measure and proportion, it is corrupted and destroyed [Plato] |
15857 | Any mixture which lacks measure and proportion doesn't even count as a mixture at all [Plato] |
15320 | Magnetic and gravity fields can occupy the same place without merging [Harré/Madden] |
12858 | Mixtures disappear if nearly all of the mixture is one ingredient [Simons] |
12859 | A mixture can have different qualities from its ingredients. [Simons] |
12818 | We shouldn't think some water retains its identity when it is mixed with air [Laycock] |
16727 | In mixtures, the four elements ceased to exist, replaced by a mixed body with a form [Pasnau] |