Saturn may have devoured his children

Categories: Comparisons

An historical example of metaphor in science writing.

"Has Saturn, perhaps, devoured his own children?"

Galileo Galilei

Quoted in: Moore, P. (1994). The Great Astronomical Revolution. 1534-1687 and the Space Age epilogue. Albion Publishing.

Galileo reported seeing two moons of Saturn (like the four he had observed around Jupiter), one each side – but later found they could no longer be observed. He was actually seeing the rings through a microscope that was not able to give a sharp image.

Saturn's rings become harder to detect when not seen from Earth at an oblique angle.

Traditionally, the planet Saturn was personified as a male person, associated with a mythical god. In myth, the god Saturn did devour his children, being afraid of a prophecy that one would come to overthrow him.

Read about personification in science texts

Read about examples of personifying nature

Read about other examples of personification

Author: Keith

Former school and college science teacher, teacher educator, research supervisor, and research methods lecturer. Emeritus Professor of Science Education at the University of Cambridge.