Article
[deleted]
2022-11-22
Aristotle analyzed qualities in his logical
work, the Categories. To him, qualities are hylomorphically–formal
attributes, such as "white" or "grammatical". Categories of state, such
as "shod" and "armed" are also non–essential qualities (katà
symbebekós). Aristotle observed: "one and the selfsame substance, while
retaining its identity, is yet capable of admitting contrary qualities.
The same individual person is at one time white, at another black, at
one time warm, at another cold, at one time good, at another bad. This
capacity is found nowhere else... it is the peculiar mark of substance
that it should be capable of admitting contrary qualities; for it is by
itself changing that it does so". Aristotle described four types of
qualitative opposites: correlatives, contraries, privatives and
positives.
John Locke presented a distinction between
primary and secondary qualities in An Essay Concerning Human
Understanding. For Locke, a quality is an idea of a sensation or a
perception. Locke further asserts that qualities can be divided in two
kinds: primary and secondary qualities. Primary qualities are intrinsic
to an object—a thing or a person—whereas secondary qualities are
dependent on the interpretation of the subjective mode and the context
of appearance. For example, a shadow is a secondary quality. It requires
a certain lighting to be applied to an object. For another example,
consider the mass of an object. Weight is a secondary quality since, as a
measurement of gravitational force, it varies depending on the distance
to, and mass of, very massive objects like the Earth, as described by
Newton's law. It could be thought that mass is intrinsic to an object,
and thus a primary quality. In the context of relativity, the idea of
mass quantifying an amount of matter requires caution. The relativistic
mass varies for variously traveling observers; then there is the idea of
rest mass or invariant mass (the magnitude of the energy-momentum
4-vector), basically a system's relativistic mass in its own rest frame
of reference. (Note, however, that Aristotle drew a distinction between
qualification and quantification; a thing's quality can vary in degree).
Only an isolated system's invariant mass in relativity is the same as
observed in variously traveling observers' rest frames, and conserved in
reactions; moreover, a system's heat, including the energy of its
massless particles such as photons, contributes to the system's
invariant mass (indeed, otherwise even an isolated system's invariant
mass would not be conserved in reactions); even a cloud of photons
traveling in different directions has, as a whole, a rest frame and a
rest energy equivalent to invariant mass. Thus, to treat rest mass (and
by that stroke, rest energy) as an intrinsic quality distinctive of
physical matter raises the question of what is to count as physical
matter. Little of the invariant mass of a hadron (for example a proton
or a neutron) consists in the invariant masses of its component quarks
(in a proton, around 1%) apart from their gluon particle fields; most of
it consists in the quantum chromodynamics binding energy of the
(massless) gluons.