Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 16.djvu/117

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M E T M E T 107 judgment, and are admitted to everlasting happiness or condemned to punishment. 1 It is after the period of a thousand years, he adds, that the human soul comes into a beast, and from a beast again into a man, if the soul originally was human. Pythagoras, who was said to have travelled in Egypt, 2 brought this fantastic doctrine into Magna Grtecia, and made it a prominent part of his teaching. He declared that he had himself been Euphorbus, the son of Panthus, in the time of the Trojan War, and had successively inhabited other human bodies, the actions of all which he remembered. 3 Closely connected with his theory of metem psychosis was his strict precept to abstain from animal food, even from eggs, from some kinds of fish, and (for some unknown, probably symbolical, reason) from beans. 4 There can be no doubt that the Egyptian custom of pre serving the mummies of cats, crocodiles, and some other creatures had its origin in the notion that they had been inhabited by souls which might some day claim these bodies for their own. We cannot suppose that Plato or the later Greeks really believed in the transmigration of souls, though there are many allusions to it, generally of a somewhat playful character. Thus Menander, in the play called The Inspired Woman 5 (eo^o/Dov/xeVr/), supposes some god to say to an old man, Crato, " When you die, you will have a second existence ; choose what creature you would like to be, dog, sheep, goat, horse, or man." To which he replies, " Make me anything rather than a man, for he is the only creature that prospers by injustice." Absurd and fantastic as such a doctrine as metem psychosis appears at first sight to be, it was in reality a logical deduction from primitive ideas about the nature of the soul. It is necessary to explain these ideas (which have important bearings on other questions) in order to show that metempsychosis was almost a necessary corollary to the belief that the soul was the vital or animating prin ciple, that the one distinction between organic and inor ganic was the existence in the former of a ^v^i- The difference between a dead body and a living body or rather, one principal difference was that the living animal breathed ; and it was observed that, as soon as the breath left the body, not only did warmth and motion cease, but the body began to decay. Life, therefore, was breath, an opinion tacitly expressed by the Greek and Roman vocabulary, animus, anima (avf/xos), i/^X 7 ? 7 ^ f ^ / J - a i spiritus. But breath is air, and air is eternal and imperish able in its very nature. Therefore the " soul," or portion of air which gave animation to the body, did not perish at the dissolution of the body, but it was returned to the element of which it was composed, and out of which it came. It followed that, from the countless millions of "souls" emancipated from bodies in all time, and still flitting about invisibly in space, the air must literally swarm with souls, a doctrine taught by Pythagoras. Hence, any creature, human or bestial, that first drew the breath of life, might, so to say, swallow a soul, i.e., take in with the act of respiration the very same particles of air which had animated some former body. For, although the soul was air, and returned to its kindred element, it was supposed to retain a peculiar character in intelligence 1 P. 249 A. Comp. Rev. xx. 2, 13; Virg., jEn. vi. 745, "Donee longa dies, perfecto temporis orbe, concretam exemit labem," &c. 2 Diogen. Laert., viii. 1, 3 ; Lucian, Gallus, 18 sq., where the doctrine of metempsychosis and the stories about the pre-existence of Pythagoras are wittily satirized. 3 Lucian, Gallus, 4, 5 ; Diodor. Sic., x. 9, 10 ; Hor., Od. i. 28, 10, "habentque Tartara Panthoiden iterum Oreo demissum." 4 Galhis, 19, 33. For fnnciful reasons for the prohibition of beans, see Lucian, Vitarum Audio, 5. B Frag. 2 22, Meineke. _ 6 Diogen. Laert., viii. 1, 32, t!va.i irdy-ra -rbv atpa tyvxuv (</>poV?7o-is), remembrance of the past, and knowledge and experience gained in some former existence. Any creature which first breathed might or might not inhale this or that soul, just as a net thrown into the water may catch this or that fish, or no fish at all. But if no " soul :) was inhaled the creature was believed for that reason to die ; and the different degrees of intelligence observed in different men and animals led to the notion that there must have been a difference in the souls that first animated them. Even the belief that the soul, especially near the time of dissolu tion from the body, could foretell future events was based on the notion of intelligence and consciousness resulting from experiences of the past. 7 As all the science of modern times cannot say precisely what life is, nor how it first came upon this earth, it is not wonderful that so obvious, though wholly erroneous, an explanation should have presented itself to primitive man when first he began to inquire into the causes of things. The extension of life, by the same term i/^x 7 ? to plants and apparently non-breathing things, which, however, had birth, growth, and death, was a development of a philosophic age, and we are not surprised to find Aristotle recognizing one form of life as vegetable, <vrtKov. 8 The irrational confusion of " soul " with sentient bodily functions, the attribution to spirits (etSwXa) of motion, speech, or other muscular and material action, though still common, while metempsychosis is derided or forgotten, is in reality, perhaps, a less excus able superstition. The Romans inherited the doctrine of metempsychosis from Ennius, the poet of Calabria, who must have been familiar with the Greek teachings which had descended to his times from the cities of Magna Grrecia. In his Annals, or Roman history in verse, Ennius told how he had seen Homer in a dream, who had assured him that the same soul which had animated both the poets had once belonged to a peacock, a story that might seem to indicate Indian traditions. The Pavo Pythagoreus and the Somnia Pytha- gorea are referred to by Persius and Horace, as well as by Lucretius. 9 Theories suggesting element-worship naturally led to the notion that air and ether (upper air) were divine. 10 Hence every soul, as being but a portion of it, was in itself divine, and therefore immortal. We thus see that the doctrine of the immortality of the soul, whether attained by a sound or a vicious course of reasoning, was an inevitable conclu sion for early thinkers. Pantheism taught that all the universe was pervaded by a divine mind, and Virgil cites the opinion of some, that the intelligence of bees was due to a portion of this universal mind residing in them, a view closely allied to the doctrine of metempsychosis. 11 A divine thing might be polluted, but not destroyed; hence the notion of purifying souls by airing them or burning away a material defilement is enlarged upon by Virgil in the sixth book of the jEneid (724 sq.). (F. A. P.) METEOR, METEORITE. The term meteor, in ac cordance with its etymology (/xerewpos), meant originally something high in the air. It has been applied to a large variety of phenomena, most of them of brief duration, which have place in the atmosphere. Disturbances in the air are aerial meteors, viz., winda, tornadoes, whirlwinds, typhoons, hurricanes, &c. The vapour of water in the atmosphere creates by its forms and precipitations the aqueous meteors, viz., clouds, fogs, mists, snow, rain, hail, 7 Diodor. Sic., xviii., 1. * Ethics, lib. i. 13. 9 Pers., Sat. vi. 9; Hor., Epist. ii. 1. 52; Lucret, i. 10 8?o y al0-rip, Prometheus exclaims, ^Esch., Prom., 88. 11 Georg. iv. 219 His quiclam signis, atque hajc exempla secuti, Esse apibus partem divinse mentis et haustus ^Etherios dixere ; deum namqiie ire per omnes

Terrasque tractusque maris cselumque profundum.