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A Note on Πρηστῆρος Αὐλός

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2013

P. Plass
Affiliation:
University of Wisconsin

Extract

In a recent article J. J. Hall has argued that the mysterious πρηστῆρος αὐλός which figures in Anaximander's theory of the universe is the funnel-shaped body of a tornado or waterspout. In reviewing meteorological evidence he notes that lightning often accompanies such storms. Anaximander himself could have concluded that the funnel is actually full of fire and then could have drawn an analogy between fiery heavenly bodies seen through a hole in surrounding mist and internal fire seen through the open bottom of a cloud.

M. L. West has expressed doubt about this suggestion on the grounds that ‘a person in the uncomfortable situation of looking up such a funnel would not see fire.’ There are undoubtedly some difficulties in Hall's proposal, as he himself admits. But West's objection is oddly off the mark. What is initially at issue is what Anaximander believed to be true, not what is true.

Type
Notes
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1972

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References

1ΠΡΗΣΤΗΡΟΣ ΑΥΛΟΣ’, in JHS lxxxix (1969) 57 f.

2 Early Greek Philosophy and the Orient (Oxford, 1971) 243.

3 Orr, Clyde Jr., Between Earth and Space (New York, 1959) 58 f.Google Scholar