ANTIPATHY, in ethics, hatred, aversion, repugnancy. Hatred is entertained against persons; aversion, and antipathy, indiscriminately against persons or things; and repugnancy, against actions alone.
Hatred is more voluntary than aversion, antipathy, or repugnancy. These last have greater affinity with the animal constitution. The causes of ANTIPATHY are less known than those of aversion. Repugnancy is less permanent than either the one or the other.—We hate a vicious character, we feel aversion to its exertions: we are affected with ANTIPATHY for certain persons at first sight; there are some affairs which we transact with repugnancy—Hatred calumniates; aversion keeps us at a distance from certain persons: ANTIPATHY makes
Antipatris us detest them; repugnancy hinders us from imitating them.
Antipodes. ANTIPATRIS (Acts xxiii. 31.), a town of Palestine, anciently called Gaphar-Saba, according to Josephus, but named Antipatris by Herod the Great, in honour of his father Antipater. It was situated in a pleasant valley, near the mountains, in the way from Jerusalem to Cæsarea. Josephus places it at about the distance of seventeen miles from Joppa.