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Concerning Nature

Chapter XXIX.
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of the eclipse of the moon.

anaximenes believes that the mouth of the wheel, about which the moon is turned, being stopped is the cause of an eclipse. berasus, that it proceeds from the turning of the dark side of the lunar orb towards us. heraclitus, that it is performed just after the manner of a boat turned upside downwards. some of the pythagoreans say, that the splendor arises from the earth, its obstruction from the antichthon (or counter-earth). some of the later philosophers, that there is such a distribution of the lunar flame, that it gradually and in a just order burns until it be full moon; in like manner, that this fire decays by degrees, until its conjunction with the sun totally extinguisheth it. plato, aristotle, the stoics, and all the mathematicians agree, that the obscurity with which the moon is every month affected ariseth from a conjunction with the sun, by whose more resplendent beams she is darkened; and the moon is then eclipsed when she falls upon the shadow of the earth, the earth interposing between the sun and moon, or (to speak more properly) the earth intercepting the light of the moon.

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