CONTROVERSIES AS TO HERON’S DATE 301
Philon’s date cannot be later than the end of the second
century B.C. (If Ctesibius flourished before 247 b.c. the argu
ment would apparently suggest rather the beginning than the
end of the second century.) Next, Heron is supposed to have
been a younger contemporary of Philon, the grounds being
the following. (1) Heron mentions a ‘ stationary-automaton ’
representation by Philon of the Nauplius-story, 1 and this is
identified by Tittel with a representation of the same story by
some contemporary of Heron’s (oi Kad’ fjfxds 2 ). But a careful
perusal of the whole passage seems to me rather to suggest
that the latter representation was not Philon’s, and that
Philon was included by Heron among the ‘ ancient ’ auto
maton-makers, and not amonghis contemporaries. 3 (2) Another
argument adduced to show that Philon was contemporary
1 Heron, Autom., pp. 404. 11-408. 9. 2 lb., p. 412. 18.
3 The relevant remarks of Heron are as follows. (1) He says that ho
has found no arrangements of ‘stationary automata’ better or more
instructive than those described by Philon of Byzantium (p. 404. 11).
As an instance he mentions Philon’s setting of the Nauplius-story, in
which he found everything good except two things {a) the mechanism
for the appearance of Athene, which was too difficult {epycoSearepov), and
(6) the absence of an incident promised by Philon in his description,
namely the falling of a thunderbolt on Ajax with a sound of thunder
accompanying it (pp. 404. 15-408. 9). This latter incident Heron could
not find anywhere in Philon, though he had consulted a great number
of copies of his work. He continues (p. 408. 9-18) that we are not to
suppose that he is running down Philon or charging him with not being
capable of carrying out what he promised. On the contrary, the omission
was probably due to a slip of memory, for it is easy enough to make
stage-thunder (he proceeds to show how to do it). But the rest of
Philon’s arrangements seemed to him satisfactory, and this, he says, is
why he has not ignored Philon’s work: ‘ for I think that my readers will
get the most benefit if they are shown, first what has been well said by
the ancients and then, separately from this, what the ancients overlooked
or what in their work needed improvement ’ (pp. 408.22-410. 6). (2) The
next chapter (pp. 410. 7-412. 2) explains generally the sort of thing the
automaton-picture has to show, and Heron says he will give one example
which he regards as the best. Then (3), after drawing a contrast between
the simpler pictures made by ‘ the ancients ’, which involved three different
movements only, and the contemporary (oi tend' ypas) representations of
interesting stories by means of more numerous and varied movements
(p. 412. 3-15), he proceeds to describe a setting of the Nauplius-story,
This is the representation which Tittel identifies with Philon’s. But it,
is to be observed that the description includes that of the episode of the
thunderbolt striking Ajax (c. 30, pp. 448.1-452. 7) which Heron expressly
says that Philon omitted. Further, the mechanism for the appearance
of Athene described in c. 29 is clearly not Philon’s ‘more difficult’
arrangement, but the simpler device described (pp. 404. 18-408. 5) as
possible and preferable to Philon’s (cf. Heron, vol. i, ed. Schmidt, pp.
Ixviii—Ixix).