Greetings,
One of the basic differences between Hellenic and Mediaeval astrologies is the Aristotelian paradigm of the latter.
One reads in another thread that the Hellenic trigons were associated with the four directions and four winds and (later) with the four Stoic (not Aristotelian!) qualities / elements as follows:
Wind / Direction Quality Stoic Element Images
-------------- ------ ----------- ------
North----------Hot----Fire--------Ram, Lion, Archer
South----------Dry----Earth-------Twins, Balance, Water-Pourer
West-----------Cold---Air---------Crab, Scorpio, Fishes
East------------Wet--- Water-------Bull, Maiden, Goat-Horned
Assuming we are in the northern hemisphere, what precisely did the wind directions mean to the ancient Greeks? Today 'north wind' means on the earth's surface an air stream FROM the north blowing towards the south and so on. However, winds from the north in the northern hemisphere tend, other things being equal, to be cool, not warm as the north receives less exposure to solar heat. Winds from the south tend to be warm for the analogous reason. Winds from the east, already warmed and dried by the sun would tend, other things being equal, to be dry compared to winds from the west. Thus, the above table of attributions does not seem convincing.
Did 'north wind' in ancient Greece perhaps mean blowing towards rather than from the north? Did 'west wind' possibly mean blowing towards the west?
Who has sorted this out or can do so?
Kind regards,
Abd-Allah Meyers
