The Aristotelian system was Greek, but the Judeo-Christian story of creation was Semitic—and Semites didn’t have such a fear of the void. The very act of creation was out of a chaotic void, and theologians like Saint Augustine, who lived in the fourth century, tried to explain it away by referring to the state before creation as “a nothing something” that is empty of form but yet “falls short of utter nothingness.” The fear of the void was so great that Christian scholars tried to fix the Bible to match Aristotle rather than vice versa.