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                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0007.tlg126.perseus-eng3" type="translation" xml:lang="eng"><div subtype="section" type="textpart" n="29"><p rend="indent">First they behold the moon as she is in herself<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">Plutarch certainly wrote <foreign xml:lang="grc">αὐτῆς σελήνης</foreign> (or perhaps <foreign xml:lang="grc">αὐτῆς τῆς σελήνης</foreign>) under the influence of Plato’s <q>true earth,</q> <foreign xml:lang="grc">αὐτὴ ἡ γῆ</foreign>, in <bibl><title rend="italic">Phaedo</title>, 109 B 7</bibl>, <bibl>110 B 6</bibl> (<foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> 935 A <foreign xml:lang="lat">supra</foreign> and 944 B <foreign xml:lang="lat">s.v.</foreign>).</note>: her magnitude and beauty and nature, which is not simple and unmixed but a blend as it were of star and earth. Just as the earth has become soft by having been mixed with breath and moist[ure] and as blood gives rise to sense-perception in the flesh with which it is commingled,<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign><bibl>Aristotle, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Part. Animal.</title> 656 B 19-21</bibl> and 25-26, <bibl>666 A 16-17</bibl>; and <bibl>Plato, <title rend="italic">Timaeus</title>, 77 E</bibl> on the connection of the blood-vessels with <foreign xml:lang="grc">τὸ τῶν αἰσθήσεων πάθος</foreign>.</note> so the moon, they say,<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">Not <q>the demons</q> who told the stranger the story, as Raingeard says, but the human authors of the theory mentioned in the next sentence; <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> <title rend="italic">Class. Phil.</title> xlvi (1951), pp. 151-152.</note> because it has been permeated through and through by ether is at once animated and fertile and at the same time has the proportion of lightness to heaviness in equipoise. In fact it is in this way too, they say, that the universe itself has entirely escaped local motion, because it has been constructed out of the things that naturally move upwards and those that naturally move downwards.<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign><title rend="italic">S. V. F.</title> ii, frag. 555 and <title rend="italic">Class. Phil.</title> xlvi (1951), p. 157, n. 105.</note> This was <pb xml:id="v12.p.207"/> also the conception of Xenocrates who, taking his start from Plato, seems<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">The Greek does not imply, as Adler supposes, that Plutarch had any doubt about what Xenocrates had said (<foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> E. M. Jones, <title rend="italic">The Platonism of Plutarch</title>, p. 55).</note> to have reached it by a kind of superhuman reasoning. Plato is the one who declared that each of the stars as well was constructed of earth and fire bound together in a proportion by means of the [two] intermediate natures, for nothing, as he said, attains perceptibility that does not contain an admixture of earth and light<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><bibl><title rend="italic">Timaeus</title>, 40 A and 31 B 32 C</bibl>; <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign><bibl>[Plato], <title rend="italic">Epinomis</title>, 981 d-e</bibl>; <bibl>Plutarch, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Fortuna Romanorum</title>, 316 E-F</bibl>. <bibl><title rend="italic">Timaeus</title>, 31 B</bibl> strictly requires <foreign xml:lang="grc">γῆς <gap reason="lost" rend=" . . . "/>καὶ πυρός</foreign> here; but according to <title rend="italic">Timaeus</title>, 45 B and 58 C <foreign xml:lang="grc">φῶς</foreign> is the species of fire that produces visibility.</note>; but Xenocrates says that the stars and the sun are composed of fire and the first density, the moon of the second density and air that is proper to her, and the earth of water [and air] and the third kind of density and that in general neither density all by itself nor subtility is receptive of soul.<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">Xenocrates, frag. 56 (Heinze); for text and implications <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> <title rend="italic">Class. Phil.</title> xlvi (1951), p. 152.</note> So much for the moon’s substance. As to her breadth or magnitude, it is not what the geometers say but many times greater. She measures off the earth’s shadow with few of her own magnitudes not because it is small but she more ardently hastens her motion in order that she may quickly pass through the gloomy place bearing away [the souls] of the good which cry out and urge her on because when they are in the shadow they no longer catch the sound <pb xml:id="v12.p.209"/> of the harmony of heaven.<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">Plutarch here gives a <q>mythical correction</q> of the astronomical calculations in 923 A-B and 932 B <foreign xml:lang="lat">supra</foreign> (on the text and the paralogism of this <q>correction</q> <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> <title rend="italic">Class. Phil.</title> xlvi [1951], pp. 152-153) and also a mythical explanation of the acceleration of which he had spoken in 933 B <foreign xml:lang="lat">supra</foreign>. With this account of the effect of the lunar eclipse upon the disembodied souls <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> <bibl><title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Genio Socratis</title>, 591 C</bibl> and for the harmony in the heavens <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> 590 C-D there, <bibl><title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Musica,</title> 1147</bibl>, <bibl>Plato’s <title rend="italic">Republic</title>, 617 B</bibl>, <bibl>Aristotle’s <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Caelo</title>, 290 B 12 291 A 28.</bibl> </note> At the same time too with wails [and] cries the souls of the chastised then approach through the shadow from below. That is why most people have the custom of beating brasses during eclipses and of raising a din and clatter against the souls,<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign><bibl><title rend="italic">Aemilius Paulus</title>, 17 (264 B)</bibl>; P<bibl>liny, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Nat. Hist.</title> ii. 12. 9 (54)</bibl>; <bibl>Tacitus, <title rend="italic">Annals</title>, i. 28</bibl>; <bibl>Juvenal, vi. 442-443</bibl>. The purpose of the custom is here made to fit the myth; in <bibl><title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Genio Socratis</title>, 591 C</bibl> the moon herself flashes and bellows to frighten away the impure souls.</note> which are frightened off also by the socalled face when they get near it, for it has a grim and horrible aspect.<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> Epigenes in Clement, <title rend="italic">Stromat.</title> v. 49 (= Kern, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Orphicorum Fragmenta</title>, frag. 33): <foreign xml:lang="grc">Γοργόνιον τὴν σελήνην διὰ τὸ ἐν αὐτῇ πρόσωπον</foreign>. <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> the notion that the face in the moon is that of the Sibyl (<title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Pythiae Oraculis</title>, 398 C-D; <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Sera Numinis Vindicta</title>, 566 D).</note> It is no such thing, however; but just as our earth contains gulfs that are deep and extensive,<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign><bibl><author>Plato</author>, <title rend="italic">Phaedo</title>, 109 B</bibl>.</note> one here pouring in towards us through the Pillars of Heracles and outside the Caspian and the Red Sea with its gulfs,<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">For the Caspian see note f on 941 C <foreign xml:lang="lat">supra</foreign>. By <q>Red Sea</q> Plutarch means what we call the Indian Ocean plus the Persian Gulf and the Red Sea; in <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Quaest. Conviv</title> 733 B he cites Agatharchidas who wrote an extensive work on the <q>Red Sea</q> (<foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> Photius, <title rend="italic">Bibliotheca</title>, cod. 250 [pp. 441 ff., Bekker]).</note> so those features are depths and hollows of the moon. The largest of them is called<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign><title rend="italic">Class. Phil.</title> xlvi (1951), p. 151 on 943 E.</note> <q>Hecate’s Recess,</q> <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">For Hecate and the moon see notes c on 937 F and b on 942 D <foreign xml:lang="lat">supra</foreign>; <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> Sophocles, frag. 492 (Nauck²) and Kern, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Orphicorum Fragmenta</title>, frag. 204. For Hecate’s association with a cave <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> <title rend="italic">Homeric Hymn II</title>, 24-25, and Roscher, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="deu">über Selene und Verwandtes</title>, pp. 46-48. Plutarch himself associates <foreign xml:lang="grc">μυχός</foreign> with the <q>punishments in Hades</q> (<title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Superstitione</title>, 167 A).</note> where the souls suffer and exact penalties for whatever they have endured or committed after having already become <pb xml:id="v12.p.211"/> Spirits<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">a This has been called inconsistent with the preceding statement in chapter 28 that only pure or purified souls attain the moon. Even the pure souls that reach the moon, however, still have the affective soul as well as mind; and Plutarch has already said in chapter 28 (942 F) that the life which they lead on the moon is <foreign xml:lang="grc">οὐ μακάριον οὐδὲ θεῖον</foreign>.</note>; and the two long ones are called <q>the Gates</q>,<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"><foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign><title rend="italic">Class. Phil.</title> xlvi (1951), p. 153.</note> for through them pass the souls now to the side of the moon that faces heaven and now back to the side that faces earth.<note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">They pass to the outer side on their say to the <q>second death</q> (944 E ff. <foreign xml:lang="lat">s.v.</foreign>) and to the hither side on their way to rebirth in bodies (945 C <foreign xml:lang="lat">s.v.</foreign>). In <bibl><title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Amatorius</title>, 766 B</bibl> the place to which souls come to be reborn in the body is called <foreign xml:lang="grc">οἱ Σελήνης καὶ Ἀφροδίτης λειμῶνες.</foreign>.</note> The side of the moon towards heaven is named <q>Elysian plain,</q> <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">See 942 F <foreign xml:lang="lat">supra</foreign> and note d there.</note> the hither side <q>House of counter-terrestrial Phersephone.</q> <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">Plutarch uses <foreign xml:lang="grc">ἀντίχθων</foreign> in the usual Pythagorean sense in <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> An. Proc. in Timaeo</title>, 1028 B (<foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Placitis</title>, 891 f, 895 C, 895 E = Aëtius, ii. 29. 4; iii. 9. 2; iii. 11. 3). Identification of the moon with the counter-earth is ascribed to certain <q>Pythagoreans</q> (but <foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> Cherniss, <title rend="italic">Aristotle’s Criticism of Plato and the Academy</title>, i, p. 562) by Simplicius, <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat"> Caelo</title>, p. 512. 17-20 (<foreign xml:lang="lat">cf.</foreign> Asclepius, <title rend="italic">Metaph.</title> p. 35. 24-27; <title rend="italic" xml:lang="lat">Scholia in Aristotelem</title>, 505 A 1 [Brandis]).</note> </p></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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