Justin's social context in the city of Rome may seem to have only a tenuous connection with his beliefs about God, his doctrine of the Logos and the other religious commitments for which he ultimately laid down his life. Perhaps, had Justin lived in Athens or Ephesus, he would have written much the same thing. This, after all, is a man deeply moved by Platonist philosophy and the “perception of immaterial things.” Furnished with such Platonist wings, Justin himself would surely claim to soar high over all such mundane realities as the streets, bridges, and buildings of ancient Rome. It is not surprising that the vast majority of scholarship on Justin and other early Christian intellectuals follows him on a similar trajectory.
The planetary radio astronomy experiment on board both Voyager spacecraft detected bursts of pulsed radio emission at frequencies below about 1.5 MHz which originate near Jupiter. The bursts have a pulse repetition frequency which varies between 0.3 and 3 Hz, a pulse duration between 0.15 and 1.0 s, and a highly variable bandwidth. Before encounter they appear unpolarized, while after encounter roughly half of the bursts appear right‐hand and half left‐hand circularly polarized. At all times the occurrence probability of bursts above 1 MHz and below 0.3 MHz is lowest around 200° in system III longitude (λIII). The importance of λIII = 200° to these bursts is reminiscent of the importance of the same longitude to the familiar hectometric and broadband kilometric Jovian radiation.
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