Fairbanks's Introduction
ANAXIMENES of Miletos, son of Eurystratos,
was the pupil or companion of Anaximandros.
According to Apollodoros, quoted by Diogenes,
he was born in the sixty-third Olympiad (528-524
B. C.). Diels1 has, how- ever, made it seem
probable that this date refers to his prime
of life, rather than to his birth. Of his
life nothing is known.
Literature: Krische, Forschungen, i. 52-57;
Teichmuller, Studien, 71-104; Revue Phil
1883, p. 6 ff.; Archiv f. d. Geschechte d.
Phil. i. pp. 315 ff. and pp. 582 ff.
There is a fragment accredited to Anaximenes
in the Collection des anciens alchimistes grecs, Livre i., Paris 1887, p. 83, II. 7-10, Olympiodoros.
Anaximenes arrived at the conclusion that
air is the one, movable, infinite, first
principle of all things. For he speaks as
follows : Air is the nearest to an immaterial
thing; for since we are generated in [Page
18] the flow of air, it is necessary that
it should be infinite and abundant, because
it is never exhausted. [For a discussion
of the above argument, v. Archive f. d. Geschichte
d. Phil. i. 315.]
Ancient Passages relating to Anaximenes in
Aristotle, & c.
Arist. Meteor. ii. 1 ; 354 a 28.
Most of the earlier students of the heavenly
bodies believed that the sun did not go underneath
the earth, but rather around the earth and
this region, and treat it disappeared from
view and produced night, because the earth
was so high toward the north. Simpl. de Coelo
273 b 45 ; Schol. Arist. 514 a 33. He regarded
the first principle as unlimited, but not
as undefined, for he called it air, thinking
that air had a sufficient adaptability to
change.
Simpl. Phys. 32 r 149, 32.
Of this one writer alone, Theophrastos, in
his account of the Physicists, uses the words
"GREEK" of texture. The rest, of
course, spoke of "GREEK".
Simpl. Phys. 2,57v.
Some say that the universe always existed,
not that it has always been the same, but
rather that it successively changes its character
in certain periods of time; as, for instance,
Anaxi- menes and Herakleitos and Diogenes.
Arist. (de Coelo ii. 13 ; 294 b 13.
Anaximenes and Anaxagoras and Demokritos
say that the breadth of the earth is the
reason why it remains where it is.
Arist. Meteor. ii. 7; 365 (a 17), b 6.
Anaximenes says that the earth was wet, and
when it dried it broke apart, and that earthquakes
are due to the breaking and falling of hills
; accordingly earthquakes occur in droughts,
and in rainy seasons also; they occur in
drought, as has been said, because the earth
dries and breaks apart, and it also crumbles
when it is wet through with waters.
Arist. Metaph. i. 3 ; 984 a 5.
Anaximenes regarded air as the first principle.
[Page 19] Plut. Prim. Frig. vii. 3, p. 947.
According to Anaximenes, the early philosopher,
we should not neglect either cold or heat
in being but should regard them as common
experiences of matter which are incident
to its changes. He says that the compressed
and the condensed state of matter is cold,
while the rarefied and relaxed (a word he
himself uses) state of it is heat. Whence
he says it is not strange that men breathe
hot and cold out of the mouth; for the breath
is cooled as it is compressed and condensed
by the lips, but when the mouth is relaxed,
it comes out warm by reason of its rarefaction.
Passages relating to Anaximenes in the Doxographists
Theophrastos; Simpl. Phys. 6r 24, 26; Dox.
476.
Anaximenes of Miletos, son of Eurystratos,
a companion of Anaximandros, agrees with
him that the essential nature of things is
one and infinite, but he regards it as not
indeterminate but rather determinate, and
calls it air; the air differs in rarity and
in density as the nature of things is different;
when very attenuated it becomes fire, when
more condensed wind, and then cloud, and
when still more condensed water and earth
and stone, and all other things are composed
of these; and he regards motion as eternal,
and by this changes are produced.
Hipp. Philos. 7; Dox. 560.
Anaximenes, himself a Milesian, son of Eurystratos,
said that infinite air is the first principle,
5 from which arise the things that have come
and are coming into existence, and the things
that will be, and gods and divine beings,
while other things are produced from these.
And the form of air is as follows:- When
it is of a very even consistency, it is imperceptible
to vision, but it becomes evident as the
result of cold or [Page 20] heat or moisture,
or when it is moved. It is always in motion;
for things would not change as they do unless
it were in motion. It has a different appearance
when it is made more dense or thinner ; when
it is expanded into a thinner state it becomes
fire, and again winds are condensed air,
and air becomes cloud by compression, and
water when it is compressed farther, and
earth and finally stones as it is more condensed.
So that generation is controlled by the opposites,
heat and cold. And the broad earth and the
moon and all the rest of the stars, being
fiery bodies, 7 are supported on the air
by their breadth. 8 And stars are made of
earth, since exhalations arise from this,
and these being attenuated become fire, and
of this fire when it is raised to the heaven
the stars are constituted. There are also
bodies of an earthy nature9 in the place
occupied by the stars, and carried along
with them in their motion. He says that the
stars do not move under the earth as others
have supposed, but around the earth, 10 just
as a cap is moved about the head. And the
sun is hidden not by going underneath the
earth, but because it is covered by some
of the higher parts of the earth, and because
of its greater distance from us. The stars
do not give forth heat because they are so
far away. Winds are produced when the air
that has been attenuated is set in motion;
and when it comes together and is yet farther
condensed, clouds are produced, and so it
changes into water. And hail is formed when
the water descending from the clouds is frozen
; and snow, when these being yet more filled
with moisture become frozen, 11 and lightning,
when clouds are separated by violence of
the winds ; for when they are separated,
[Page 21] the flash is bright and like fire.
12 And a rainbow is produced when the sun's
rays fall on compressed air; 13 and earthquakes
are produced when the earth is changed yet
more by beating and cooling. 14 Such are
the opinions of Anaximenes. And he flourished
about the first year of the fifty-eighth
Olympiad.
Plut. Strom. 3 ; Dox. 579.
Anaximenes says that air is the first principle
of all things, and that it is infinite in
quantity but is defined by its qualities;
and all things are generated by a certain
condensation or rarefaction of it. Motion
also exists from eternity. And by compression
of the air the earth was formed, and it is
very broad; accordingly he says that this
rests on air; and the sun and the moon and
the rest of the stars were formed from earth.
He declared that the sun is earth because
of its swift motion,' and it has the proper
amount of heat.
Cic. de Nat, Deor. i. 10 ; Dox. 531.
Afterwards Anaximenes said that air is god,
15 [and that it arose] and that it is boundless
and infinite and always in motion; just as
though air without any form could be god,
when it is very necessary that god should
be not only of some form, but of the most
beautiful form; or as though everything which
comes into being were not thereby subject
to death.
Aet. i. 3; Dox. 278.
Anaximenes of Miletos, son of Eurystratos,
declared that air is the first principle
of things, for from this all things arise
and into this they are all resolved again.
As our soul which is air, he says, holds
us together, so wind [i.e. breath, 7rvc@,ua]
and air encompass the whole world. He uses
these words 'air' and 'wind' synonymously.
He is mistaken in thinking that animals are
composed of simple [Page 22] homogeneous
air and wind ; for it is impossible that
one first principle should constitute the
substance of things, pushed by condensed
resisting air. but an active cause is also
necessary ; just as silver alone is not enough
to become coin, but there is need of an active
cause, i. e. a coin-maker; [so there is need
of copper and wood and other substances].
Aet. ii. 1 ; 327,
Anaximenes et al.: Infinite worlds exist
in the infinite in every cycle. 4; 331, The
world is perishable. 11 ; 339. The sky is
the revolving vault most distant from the
earth. 14; 344. The stars are fixed like
nailheads in the crystalline (vault). 19
347. The stars shine for none of these reasons,
but solely by the light of the sun. 22 ;
352. The sun is broad [like a leaf]. 23;
352. The stars revolve, being pushed by condensed
resisting air.
Aet, iii. 10; 377.
The form of the earth is like a table, 15
; 379. The dryness of the air, due to drought,
and its wetness, due to rainstorms, are the
causes of earthquakes.
Aet. iv, 3; 387.
Anaximenes et al.: The soul is like air in
its nature.