Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-fscjk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T06:51:19.820Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

‘Amaze Your Friends!’ Lucretius on Magnets1.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 September 2009

Extract

People wonder at this stone [the magnet]. Indeed it often makes a chain of rings hanging from itself. For you can sometimes see five or more rings hanging down one after another swaying in light breezes, when each hangs down from another, clinging underneath it, and each feels from the other the force and attraction of the stone; so much does its force penetrate and have its effect. … It also happens sometimes that the nature of iron withdraws from this stone, and will flee it and follow it in turn. I have even seen iron rings leap up, and at the same time iron filings seethe in bronze bowls when a magnet has been put underneath, so eager to escape the stone is iron seen to be.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 1996

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

NOTES

2. The meaning of Samothracia is quite obscure. Isidore of Seville (Orig. 19 32.5) refers to a Samothracian ring which was golden with some kind of iron attachment, but it is by no means clear that this is what Lucretius has in mind.

3. C. Bailey, Titi Lucretii Can Natura, De RerumLibri Sex (Oxford, 1947), iii. 1705Google Scholar.

4. Augustine, , De Civitate Dei 21.4Google Scholar.

5. Alexander, of Aphrodisias, Aporiōn kai luseōn 2.23Google Scholar.

6. Galen, , Peri Kraseōs kai Dunameōs 11.612Google Scholar.

7. Pliny, , Natural History 36.25Google Scholar.

8. Theophrastus, , De Lapidibus 5.29Google Scholar.

9. Pliny, , Natural History 34.42Google Scholar.

10. Pliny, , Natural History 36.25Google Scholar.

11. Italicus, Silius, Punica 3.265–7Google Scholar.

12. Augustine, , De Civitate Dei 21.4Google Scholar.

13. Neoptolemus, , PeriAphoron 31Google Scholar.

14. e.g. Dioscorides, , De Materia Medica 5.126.5Google Scholar.

15. Propertius 4.5.9.

16. Augustine, De Civitate Dei 21 A.

17. Plato, , Ion 533DGoogle Scholar.

18. Philo, , On the Creation 141Google Scholar.

19. Ambrose, , Epistulae 1.45.14Google Scholar.

20. Claudian, , Idyll 5.22–39Google Scholar.

21. Plutarch, , Qwest. Conviv. 2.7.1Google Scholar.

22. Ptolemy, , Apotelesmatika 11Google Scholar.

23. Ptolemy, , Geographia 7.2.31Google Scholar.

24. Pliny, , Natural History 34.42Google Scholar.

25. Augustine, , De Civitate Dei 21.6Google Scholar.

26. Ausonius, , Mosella 311–17Google Scholar.

27. Themistius, , In Physic. Theta, 20Google Scholar.

28. Pliny, , Natural History 34.42Google Scholar.

29. Philodemus, , On Methods of Inference 1.21–9; 9.35–8; 11.9–13; 15.1–13Google Scholar.

30. Empiricus, Sextus, Pros tous Grammatikous 226Google Scholar.

31. Galen, , Peri Phusikōn Dunameōn 1.14.44–54Google Scholar.

32. Pliny, , Natural History 34.42Google Scholar.

33. Cicero, , De Divinatione 1.40.86Google Scholar.

34. Augustine, , De Civitate Dei 21.4Google Scholar.

35. Plutarch, Quaest. Conviv. 2.7.1Google Scholar.

36. e.g. Galen, , Peri Phusikōn Dunameōn 1.14.45Google Scholar.

37. Aelian, , On Animals 10.14Google Scholar.

38. Porphyry, , De Abstinentta 4.265.8Google Scholar.

39. Achilles Tatius 1.17.

40. Palatine Anthology, 12.152.

41. e.g. Clement of Alexandria, , Stromateis 2.370Google Scholar; Pliny, , Natural History, 34.42Google Scholar.

42. Galen, , Peri Phusikōn Dunameōn 1.12.27–14.54Google Scholar.

43. Galen, , Peri Phusikōn Dunameōn 1.14.44Google Scholar.

44. Pliny, , Natural History 36.25Google Scholar.

45. Loc. cit. (n. 44).

46. Plutarch, , On Isis and Osiris 62Google Scholar.

47. [Orpheus, ], Lithica 306–37Google Scholar.

48. Philoponus, , In Physic. 3.4Google Scholar.