Footnotes: Early Greek Astronomers

[1]KRS. p. 9
[2]Heath. p. xii.
[3]KRS. p. 726.
[4]KRS. p. 25. Aristophanes spoofs this in The Birds.
[5]KRS. p. 11.
[6]Heath. p. xvi.
[7]KRS. p. 88.
[8]KRS. p. 131.
[9]KRS. p. 135.
[10]KRS. p. 151.
[11]KRS. p. 153.
[12]Heath. p. 15.
[13]KRS. p. 252.
[14]KRS. p. 258
[15]Heath. p. xxxvii, KRS. p. 300.
[16]Heath. p. 27.
[17]Heath. p. xxxvi-xxxvii.
[18]Heath. p. 34.
[19] Heath. p. xxxviii.
[20] Heath. p. xliv. [21] Christopher Fry, The Lady's not for Burning. Second Edition. 1950. A skeptic chastises a fellow rationalist for waxing poetic about the moon: "The moon is nothing but a circumambulating aphrodisiac, divinely subsidized to promote a rising birthrate, a veneer of sheerest Venus upon the planks of time, which may fool the Ocean, but which fools not me."