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Hippolytus

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Introductory Notice to Hippolytus.

[154] Or, “difference.”

[155] Or, “during.”

[156] ἀποτέξεως; some would read ἀποτάξεως.

[157] The passage is given more explicitly in Sextus Empiricus. (See Adversus Astrol., v. 53.)

[158] Sextus uses almost these words.

[159] Or “lodgment” (Sextus), or “deposition.”

[160] Or, “attendants of physicians.”

[161] Or, “make.”

[162] Or, “vanishes.”

[163] Not in Sextus Empiricus.

[164] The passage is more clearly given in Sextus.

Chapter IV.—Impossibility of Fixing the Horoscope; Failure of an Attempt to Do This at the Period of Birth.

[165] Or, “the cold atmosphere.”

[166] Or, “manifestation.”

[167] Or, “manifestation.”

[168] Or, “reasonable.”

[169] Or, “but the motion…is whirled on with velocity.”

[170] This rendering of the passage may be deduced from Sextus Empiricus.

Chapter V.—Another Method of Fixing the Horoscope at Birth; Equally Futile; Use of the Clepsydra in Astrology; The Predictions of the Chaldeans Not Verified.

[171] The text is corrupt, but the above seems probably the meaning, and agrees with the rendering of Schneidewin and Cruice.

[172] Or, “view.”

[173] The clepsydra, an instrument for measuring duration, was, with the sun-dial, invented by the Egyptians under the Ptolemies. It was employed not only for the measurement of time, but for making astronomic calculations. Water, as the name imports, was the fluid employed, though mercury has been likewise used. The inherent defect of an instrument of this description is mentioned by Hippolytus.

[174] Literally, “twisting, tergiversating.”

 

 

 

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