Even today, you can hear a lot of “five elements” and “the fifth element” and so forth. An Aristotelian myth, very much alive even today.
What?
Is this another non-US thing? I never hear talk of the “four elements” except in mocking of how foolish the ancients must have been to think that (for instance) wood contains fire. And it was hardly an Aristotelian original.
I recall being taught them (as in, the teacher said “these are the 4 elements: earth, fire, wind, and water” and had us each make a full page drawing to plaster on the wall; no mention that it was an antiquated Greek model or anything) in kindergarten and/or elementary school in Peru. Aether was also mentioned as the 5th element, but it was handwaved as being too advanced for us or something. Frankly, I don’t think they had any idea what the hell they were talking about; somebody just told them that those were the elements and they passed it on.
Not quite as extreme, but I had a science teacher (iirc, in junior high (that’s 7th through 9th grade) who said very firmly that the sun is not a star, the sun is the sun.
Could you please elaborate on why you regard it as such? I can think of a couple of things to take away from it that would be frightening (that people will repeat “earth, fire, wind, and water” as easily as they will “carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, and fluoride”, for instance), but I feel like I must be missing something because I wasn’t expecting that kind of response.
Part of it is that. But it also that someone could be so divorced from modern science that it wouldn’t occur to them that earth varies in nature. Or that they hadn’t heard that water is hydrogen and oxygen. Or if they have heard that, they didn’t try to reconcile it at all with the claim about water being elemental. The notion that there are people out there who are that uncritical not for any motivated reason (as some religious individuals are) but out of simply humdrum everyday lack of thinking. And that such people would then go on to teach other people?
I guess I shouldn’t have found this as disturbing as I did. But I generally have a low opinion of humans, and it seems like no matter how cynical or pessimistic I am, I’m sill surprised by their behavior.
The four elements is still really popular in new-agey circles. I believe my element is “air” and it has something to do with my birthday or astrological sign. The four element thing is really central to Wiccan practice, or it least it was in middle school when I learned this stuff (doing spells and shit was at that time very popular among 14-year-old girls and I was a 14-year-old boy).
I had never heard of quintessence until I studied Aristotle, though.
I shouldn’t speak for actual Wiccans, my experience was mostly love spells and giggling. I did sit in a circle once and “call” the air element after which people did the same for fire, earth and water. Then someone stole some of my hair to make me fall in love with them and we all smoked cinnamon sticks.
One great virtue of this dual explanation is that it removes the need for
what William James, in his remarkable “The Varieties of Religious
Experience”, called the “objective correlative”. By identifying the Gods with
shared features of our psychological and inter-subjective experience, but
being willing to dance with them on their own terms in the ritual circle, we
can explain religious experience in respectful and non-reductive ways without
making any anti-rational commitments about history or cosmology. Scientific
method cannot ultimately be reconciled with religious faith, but it can get
along with experiential mysticism just fine.
Doreen Valiente
talks about the four elements and Spirit as a fifth element in
An ABC of Witchcraft (1973); see for example the “Pentagram” entry.
(I was into Wicca when I was a 14-year-old boy too!)
Wikipedia is more trustworthy than I am (they same the same about it being more about ritual than belief). I don’t remember anything about the 5th element but wikipedia says that is there too. What we did was apparently “casting the circle” and I sat on the east side (or facing the east, I can’t remember) and read something about wind and slyphs. I recall thinking that being born with air as my element should imply that I had more control over the air/wind, but that’s probably the 14-year-old version.
Is that functional evidence of anything at all? Most of those refer to the title of a campy but fun movie. No one takes that idea at all seriously. Scientists certainly didn’t take this idea at all seriously by even the early 1700s (Becher’s work was in the 1660s and 1670s). Between Becher and Boyle, this was well-settled by the time Kant came around. (Point of fact as early as 1620 or so people realized that Copernican system wreaked havoc with the 5 element model although many tried to replace it with a four element model.)
The only times today I ever see this myth are in things like Dungeons and Dragons, or occasionally when dealing with extreme New Age nonsense.
Edit: Also compare for example this search to yours which makes it clear that when one is looking for the fifth element meaning aether there are very few hits and most are either deliberate historical references or websites explaining the history.
What?
Is this another non-US thing? I never hear talk of the “four elements” except in mocking of how foolish the ancients must have been to think that (for instance) wood contains fire. And it was hardly an Aristotelian original.
I recall being taught them (as in, the teacher said “these are the 4 elements: earth, fire, wind, and water” and had us each make a full page drawing to plaster on the wall; no mention that it was an antiquated Greek model or anything) in kindergarten and/or elementary school in Peru. Aether was also mentioned as the 5th element, but it was handwaved as being too advanced for us or something. Frankly, I don’t think they had any idea what the hell they were talking about; somebody just told them that those were the elements and they passed it on.
That is one of the most deeply fascinating and frightening anecdotes I have ever heard on LW.
I had a science teacher in about 5th grade who told us that
She was surprised and skeptical when I told her that cells were made of atoms.
Not quite as extreme, but I had a science teacher (iirc, in junior high (that’s 7th through 9th grade) who said very firmly that the sun is not a star, the sun is the sun.
Could you please elaborate on why you regard it as such? I can think of a couple of things to take away from it that would be frightening (that people will repeat “earth, fire, wind, and water” as easily as they will “carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, and fluoride”, for instance), but I feel like I must be missing something because I wasn’t expecting that kind of response.
Part of it is that. But it also that someone could be so divorced from modern science that it wouldn’t occur to them that earth varies in nature. Or that they hadn’t heard that water is hydrogen and oxygen. Or if they have heard that, they didn’t try to reconcile it at all with the claim about water being elemental. The notion that there are people out there who are that uncritical not for any motivated reason (as some religious individuals are) but out of simply humdrum everyday lack of thinking. And that such people would then go on to teach other people?
I guess I shouldn’t have found this as disturbing as I did. But I generally have a low opinion of humans, and it seems like no matter how cynical or pessimistic I am, I’m sill surprised by their behavior.
The four elements is still really popular in new-agey circles. I believe my element is “air” and it has something to do with my birthday or astrological sign. The four element thing is really central to Wiccan practice, or it least it was in middle school when I learned this stuff (doing spells and shit was at that time very popular among 14-year-old girls and I was a 14-year-old boy).
I had never heard of quintessence until I studied Aristotle, though.
I’m a somewhat casual Neo-pagan—I enjoy the rituals.
As far as I can tell, the four elements are viewed as a convenient source of symbolism, but not believed in literally.
I don’t know about Wiccans, but Neo-paganism is a community of practice, not belief. Neo-pagans cover the range from atheism to literal belief.
I shouldn’t speak for actual Wiccans, my experience was mostly love spells and giggling. I did sit in a circle once and “call” the air element after which people did the same for fire, earth and water. Then someone stole some of my hair to make me fall in love with them and we all smoked cinnamon sticks.
Another example: I don’t know if Eric Raymond would self-describe as atheist, but he is a neopagan with, as far as I can tell, a naturalistic worldview.
Edit—a key quote:
Doreen Valiente talks about the four elements and Spirit as a fifth element in An ABC of Witchcraft (1973); see for example the “Pentagram” entry. (I was into Wicca when I was a 14-year-old boy too!)
In what sense did the Wiccans believe in the four (or five) elements?
Wikipedia is more trustworthy than I am (they same the same about it being more about ritual than belief). I don’t remember anything about the 5th element but wikipedia says that is there too. What we did was apparently “casting the circle” and I sat on the east side (or facing the east, I can’t remember) and read something about wind and slyphs. I recall thinking that being born with air as my element should imply that I had more control over the air/wind, but that’s probably the 14-year-old version.
Sorry, I was automatically not counting the Wiccans as ‘serious’ which is probably unfair.
Really?
Ah. I didn’t realize you were speaking of Aether specifically.
Also, the kids are pretty into Avatar: The Last Airbender.
(Though I realize you were talking about serious belief)
I wouldn’t say so. America (as Europe and Asia) is full of this shit. See this!
Is that functional evidence of anything at all? Most of those refer to the title of a campy but fun movie. No one takes that idea at all seriously. Scientists certainly didn’t take this idea at all seriously by even the early 1700s (Becher’s work was in the 1660s and 1670s). Between Becher and Boyle, this was well-settled by the time Kant came around. (Point of fact as early as 1620 or so people realized that Copernican system wreaked havoc with the 5 element model although many tried to replace it with a four element model.)
The only times today I ever see this myth are in things like Dungeons and Dragons, or occasionally when dealing with extreme New Age nonsense.
Edit: Also compare for example this search to yours which makes it clear that when one is looking for the fifth element meaning aether there are very few hits and most are either deliberate historical references or websites explaining the history.
Those are all related to the sci-fi movie. I thought your claim was that people were taking it seriously.
ETA: And the ‘fifth element’ in that movie is certainly not Aether.