“All things manifesting in the lower worlds exist first in
the intangible rings of the upper spheres,
so that creation is, in truth,
the process of making tangible the intangible
by extending the intangible into various vibratory rates.”

― Manly P. Hall

The Qabbalah, the Secret Doctrine of Israel

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Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Pythagoras

Pythagoras of Samos was an Ionian Greekphilosopher and the eponymous founder of the Pythagoreanism movement. His political and religious teachings were well-known in Magna Graecia and influenced the philosophies of PlatoAristotle, and, through them, Western philosophy.
Knowledge of Pythagoras's life is largely clouded by legend and obfuscation, but he appears to have been the son of Mnesarchus, a seal engraver on the island of Samos. Modern scholars disagree regarding Pythagoras's education and influences, but they do agree that, in around 530 BC, he travelled to Croton, where he founded a school in which initiates were sworn to secrecy and lived a communalascetic lifestyle. Following Croton's decisive victory over Sybaris in around 510 BC, Pythagoras's followers came into conflict with supporters of democracy and Pythagorean meeting houses were burned. Pythagoras may have been killed during this persecution, or he may have escaped to Metapontum, where he eventually died. The teaching most securely identified with Pythagoras is metempsychosis, or the "transmigration of souls", which holds that every soul is immortal and, upon death, enters into a new body. He may have also devised the doctrine of musica universalis, which holds that the planets move according to mathematical equations and thus resonate to produce an inaudible symphony of music. Scholars debate whether Pythagoras himself developed the numerological and musical teachings attributed to him, or if those teachings were developed by his later followers, particularly Philolaus of Croton. He probably prohibited his followers from eating beans, but he may or may not have advocated a strictly vegetarian diet.
In antiquity, Pythagoras was credited with many mathematical and scientific discoveries, including the Pythagorean theoremPythagorean tuning, the five regular solids, the Theory of Proportions, the sphericity of the Earth, and the identity of the morning and evening stars as the planet Venus. It was said that he was the first man to call himself a philosopher ("lover of wisdom") and that he was the first to divide the globe into five climatic zones. Classical historians debate whether Pythagoras made these discoveries, and many of the accomplishments credited to him likely originated earlier or were made by his colleagues or successors. Some accounts mention that the philosophy associated with Pythagoras was related to mathematics and that numbers were important, but it is debated to what extent, if at all, he actually contributed to mathematics or natural philosophy.
Pythagoras influenced Plato, whose dialogues, especially his Timaeus, exhibit Pythagorean teachings. Pythagorean ideas about mathematical perfection also impacted ancient Greek art. His teachings underwent a major revival in the first century BC among Middle Platonists, coinciding with the rise of Neopythagoreanism. Pythagoras continued to be regarded as a great philosopher throughout the Middle Ages and his philosophy had a major impact on scientists such as Nicolaus CopernicusJohannes Kepler, and Isaac Newton. Pythagorean symbolism was used throughout early modern European esotericism and his teachings as portrayed in Ovid's Metamorphoses influenced the growth of the vegetarian movement.

Biographical sources

Bust of Pythagoras in the Vatican Museum, Vatican City, showing him as a "tired-looking older man"[1]
Bronze bust of a philosopher wearing a tainia from Villa of the PapyriHerculaneum, possibly a fictional bust of Pythagoras[5][1]
No authentic writings of Pythagoras have survived to the present day and almost nothing is known for certain about his life. The earliest sources on Pythagoras's life are brief, ambiguous, and often satirical. The earliest source on Pythagoras's teachings is a satirical poem written by Xenophanes of Colophon, a contemporary of Pythagoras, which describes Pythagoras interceding on behalf of a dog that is being beaten, professing to recognize in its cries the voice of a departed friend.
Alcmaeon of Croton, a doctor who lived in Croton at around the same time Pythagoras lived there, incorporates many Pythagorean teachings into his writings and alludes to having possibly known Pythagoras personally. The poet Heraclitus of Ephesus, who was born across a few miles of sea away from Samos and may have lived within Pythagoras's lifetime,[18] pegged Pythagoras as a clever charlatan,[11][18] remarking that "Pythagoras, son of Mnesarchus, practiced inquiry more than any other man, and selecting from these writings he manufactured a wisdom for himself—much learning, artful knavery."[18][11]
The Greek poets Ion of Chios (c. 480 – c. 421 BC) and Empedocles of Acragas (c. 493 – c. 432 BC) both express admiration for Pythagoras in their poems.[19] The first concise early description of Pythagoras comes from the historian Herodotus of Halicarnassus (c. 484 – c. 420 BC),[20] who describes Pythagoras as "not the most insignificant" of Greek sages[21] and states that Pythagoras taught his followers how to attain immortality.[20] The writings attributed to the Pythagorean philosopher Philolaus of Croton, who lived in the late fifth century BC, are the earliest texts to describe the numerological and musical theories that were later ascribed to Pythagoras.[22] The Athenian rhetorician Isocrates (436–338 BC) was the first to describe Pythagoras as having visited Egypt.[20] Aristotle wrote a treatise On the Pythagoreans, which is no longer extant.[23] Some of it may be preserved in the Protrepticus. Aristotle's disciples DicaearchusAristoxenus, and Heraclides Ponticus also wrote on the same subject.[24]
Most of the major sources on Pythagoras's life are from the Roman period,[25] by which point "the history of Pythagoreanism was already... the laborious reconstruction of something lost and gone."[24] Three lives of Pythagoras have survived from late antiquity,[25][10] all of which are filled primarily with myths and legends. The earliest and most respectable of these is the one from Diogenes Laërtius's Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers.[25][26] The two later lives were written by the Neoplatonist philosophers Porphyry and Iamblichus[25][26] and were partially intended as polemics against the rise of Christianity.[26] The later sources are much lengthier than the earlier ones,[25] and even more fantastic in their descriptions of Pythagoras's achievements.[25][26] Porphyry and Iamblichus did use some material from the lost writings of Aristotle's disciples[24] and material taken from these sources is generally considered to be the most reliable.[24]

Life


Herodotus
Isocrates, and other early writers agree that Pythagoras was the son of Mnesarchus[28] and that he was born on the Greek island of Samos, situated in the eastern Aegean.[28][29] His father is said to have been a gem-engraver or a wealthy merchant,[30][31] but his ancestry is disputed and unclear.[32][Notes 3] Pythagoras's name led him to be associated with Pythian ApolloAristippus of Cyrene explained his name by saying, "He spoke (ἀγορεύωagoreúō) the truth no less than did the Pythian [sic] (Πῡθῐ́ᾱPūthíā)", and Iamblichus tells the story that the Pythia prophesied that his pregnant mother would give birth to a man supremely beautiful, wise, and beneficial to humankind.[33] A late source gives his mother's name as Pythais.[34] As to the date of his birth, Aristoxenus stated that Pythagoras left Samos in the reign of Polycrates, at the age of 40, which would give a date of birth around 570 BC.[35]
According to Antiphon, while he was still on Samos, Pythagoras founded a school known as the "semicircle",[33][36] where prominent Samians could discuss matters of public concern.[36] Pythagoras himself dwelled in a secret cave,[33][36] where he studied in private.[33][36]
Map of Italy showing locations associated with Pythagoras
Around 530 BC, he left Samos,[28][37] possibly because he disagreed with the tyranny of Polycrates in Samos.[38] His later admirers state that it was because Pythagoras was so overburdened with public duties in Samos, because of the high estimation in which he was held by his fellow-citizens.[39] He arrived in the Greek colony of Croton (today's Crotone, in Calabria) in what was then Magna Graecia.[40][28] At Croton, he founded the philosophical school of Pythagoreanism,[28] whose practitioners adhered to a strict, disciplined way of life. Pythagoras acquired great political influence in Magna Graecia;[41][28] later biographers tell fantastical stories of the effects of his eloquent speech in leading the people of Croton to abandon their luxurious and corrupt way of life and devote themselves to the purer system which he came to introduce.[42]
Pythagoras's teachings of dedication and asceticism are credited with aiding in Croton's decisive victory over the neighboring colony of Sybaris in 510 BC.[43] The forces of Croton were headed by the Pythagorean Milo, and it is likely that the members of the brotherhood took a prominent part. After the victory, a democratic constitution was proposed,[43] but the Pythagoreans rejected it.[43] The supporters of democracy, headed by Cylon and Ninon, the former of whom is said to have been irritated by his exclusion from Pythagoras's brotherhood, roused the populace against them. An attack was made upon them while assembled either in the house of Milo, or in some other meeting-place.[44] The building was set on fire,[44] and many of the assembled members perished;[44] only the younger and more active members managed to escape.[45] Sources disagree regarding whether Pythagoras was killed,[27] or if he managed to flee to Metapontum, where he lived out the rest of his life.[27][44][46] One legend reported by both Diogenes Laërtius and Iamblichus states that Pythagoras almost managed to escape his pursuers, but that he came to a bean field and refused to run through it because doing so would violate his own teachings,[47] so instead he stopped and was killed as a result.[48]

Family


Illustration from 1913 showing Pythagoras teaching a class of women. Pythagoras believed that women should be taught philosophy as well as men[49] and many prominent members of his school were women.[50][51]
Diogenes Laërtius states that Pythagoras "did not indulge in the pleasures of love"[52] and that he cautioned others to only have sex "whenever you are willing to be weaker than yourself".[53] According to Porphyry, Pythagoras married Theano, a lady of Crete and the daughter of Pythenax[53] and had several children with her.[53] Porphyry writes that Pythagoras had two sons named Telauges and Arignote,[53] and a daughter named Myia,[53] who "took precedence among the maidens in Croton and, when a wife, among married women."[53] Iamblichus mentions none of these children[53] and instead only mentions a son named Mnesarchus after his grandfather.[53] This son was raised by Pythagoras's appointed successor Aristaeus and eventually took over the school when Aristaeus was too old to continue running it.[53]
The wrestler Milo of Croton was said to have been a close associate of Pythagoras[33] and was credited with having saved the philosopher's life when a roof was about to collapse.[33] This association may been the result of confusion with a different man named Pythagoras, who was an athletics trainer.[54] Diogenes Laërtius records Milo's wife's name as Myia.[53] Iamblichus mentions Theano as the wife of Brontinus of Croton.[53] Diogenes Laërtius states that the same Theano was Pythagoras's pupil[53] and that Pythagoras's wife Theano was her daughter.[53] Diogenes Laërtius also records that works supposedly written by Theano were still extant during his own lifetime[53] and quotes several opinions attributed to her.[53] These writings are now known to be pseudepigraphical.[53]

Influences


Paestan red-figure bell-kraterdepicting the Delphic priestess sitting atop her tripod, (c. 330 BC). According to one tradition, Pythagoras learned most of his moral teachings from the Delphic priestess Themistoclea.[55][56][57]
Scholars disagree regarding who Pythagoras's teacher was[58] because reliable information on the subject is lacking.[58] Some say his training was almost entirely Greek, others exclusively Egyptian and Oriental.[58] Each of Pythagoras's alleged tutors seems to call attention to a different aspect of Pythagoras's own teachings.[58] Various ancient sources list Hermodamas of Samos,[59] or his father Creophylus of Samos (who both stand for the domestic rhapsodic tradition of Samos) among his possible tutors; whereas other traditions credit Bias of Priene, Thales,[60] Anaximander (a pupil of Thales),[60][61] and Pherecydes of Syros (all exponents of the Greek philosophical tradition).[62] Of the various attributions regarding his Greek teachers, Pherecydes of Syros is mentioned most often.[63]
Before 520 BC, on one of his visits to Egypt or Greece, Pythagoras might have met Thales of Miletus, who would have been around fifty-four years older than him.[64] Thales was a philosopher, scientist, mathematician, and engineer,[38] also known for a special case of the inscribed angle theorem. Pythagoras's birthplace, the island of Samos, is situated in the Northeast Aegean Sea not far from Miletus.[65] Diogenes Laërtius cites a statement from Aristoxenus (fourth century BC) stating that Pythagoras learned most of his moral doctrines from the Delphic priestess Themistoclea.[55][56][57] Porphyry affirms this assertion,[66] but calls the priestess Aristoclea (Aristokleia).[67] Ancient authorities furthermore note the similarities between the religious and ascetic peculiarities of Pythagoras with the Orphic or Cretan mysteries,[68] or the Delphic oracle.[69]
Following a similar logic, the Egyptians are said to have taught him geometry, the Phoenicians arithmetic, the Chaldeans astronomy, and the Magi the principles of religion and practical maxims for the conduct of life.[70] According to Diogenes Laërtius, Pythagoras not only visited Egypt and learnt the Egyptian language (as reported by Antiphon in his On Men of Outstanding Merit), but also "journeyed among the Chaldaeans and Magi." Later in Crete, he went to the Cave of Ida with Epimenides, and entered Egyptian sanctuaries for the purpose to learn information concerning the secret lore of the different gods.[71] The Middle Platonist biographer Plutarch (c. 46 – c. 120 AD) writes in his treatise On Isis and Osiris that, during his visit to Egypt, Pythagoras received instruction from the Egyptian priest Oenuphis of Heliopolis(meanwhile Solon received lectures from a Sonchis of Sais).[72] Other ancient writers also mention Pythagoras's visit to Egypt.[73] According to the Christian theologian Clement of Alexandria (c. 150 – c. 215 AD), "Pythagoras was a disciple of Soches, an Egyptian archprophet, as well as Plato of Sechnuphis of Heliopolis."[74]

Teachings

Metempsychosis


In Raphael's fresco The School of Athens, Pythagoras is shown writing in a book as a young man presents him with a tablet showing a diagrammatic representation of a lyre above a drawing of the sacred tetractys.[75]
Although the exact details of Pythagoras's teachings are uncertain,[76][77] it is possible to reconstruct a general outline of his main ideas.[76][78] Aristotle writes at length about the teachings of the Pythagoreans,[79][16] but without mentioning Pythagoras directly.[79][16] One of Pythagoras's main doctrines appears to have been metempsychosis,[80][81][37][82][83] the belief that all soulsare immortal and that, after death, a soul is transferred into a new body.[80] This teaching is referenced by Xenophanes, Ion of Chios, and Herodotus.[84][80]
Empedocles alludes in one of his poems that Pythagoras may have claimed to possess the ability to recall his former incarnations.[85] Diogenes Laërtius reports an account from Heraclides Ponticus that Pythagoras told people that he had lived four previous lives that he could remember in detail.[86][87][88] The first of these lives was as Aethalides the son of Hermes, who granted him the ability to remember all his past incarnations.[89] Next, he was incarnated as Euphorbus, a minor hero from the Trojan War briefly mentioned in the Iliad.[90] He then became the philosopher Hermotimus,[91] who recognized the shield of Euphorbus in the temple of Apollo.[91] His final incarnation was as Pyrrhus, a fisherman from Delos.[91] One of his past lives, as reported by Dicaearchus, was as a beautiful courtesan.[92][81]

Mystical teachings

Another belief attributed to Pythagoras was that of the "harmony of the spheres",[93] which maintained that the planets and stars move according to mathematical equations, which correspond to musical notes and thus produce an inaudible symphony.[93]According to Porphyry, Pythagoras taught that the seven Muses were actually the seven planets singing together.[94] In his philosophical dialogue ProtrepticusAristotle has his literary double say:
When Pythagoras was asked [why humans exist], he said, "to observe the heavens," and he used to claim that he himself was an observer of nature, and it was for the sake of this that he had passed over into life.[95]
Pythagoras was said to have practised divination and prophecy.[96] In the visits to various places in Greece—DelosSpartaPhliusCrete, etc.—which are ascribed to him, he usually appears either in his religious or priestly guise, or else as a lawgiver.[97]

Numerology


Pythagoras is credited with having devised the tetractys,[98] an important sacred symbol in later Pythagoreanism.[99][100]
According to Aristotle, the Pythagoreans used mathematics for solely mystical reasons, devoid of practical application.[101] They believed that all things were made of numbers.[102][103] The number one (the monad) represented the origin of all things[104] and the number two (the dyad) represented matter.[104] The number three was an "ideal number" because it had a beginning, middle, and end[105] and was the smallest number of points that could be used to define a plane triangle, which they revered as a symbol of the god Apollo.[105] The number four signified the four seasons and the four elements.[106] The number seven was also sacred because it was the number of planets and the number of strings on a lyre,[106] and because Apollo's birthday was celebrated on the seventh day of each month.[106] They believed that odd numbers were masculine,[107] that even numbers were feminine,[107] and that the number five represented marriage, because it was the sum of two and three.[108][109]
Ten was regarded as the "perfect number"[101] and the Pythagoreans honored it by never gathering in groups larger than ten.[110] Pythagoras was credited with devising the tetractys, the triangular figure of four rows which add up to the perfect number, ten.[98] The Pythagoreans regarded the tetractys as a symbol of utmost mystical importance.[98][99] Iamblichus, in his Life of Pythagoras, states that the tetractys was "so admirable, and so divinised by those who understood [it]," that Pythagoras's students would swear oaths by it.[111][75][99]
Modern scholars debate whether these numerological teachings were developed by Pythagoras himself or by the later Pythagorean philosopher Philolaus of Croton.[112] In his landmark study Lore and Science in Ancient Pythagoreanism, Walter Burkert argues that Pythagoras was a charismatic political and religious teacher,[113] but that the number philosophy attributed to him was really an innovation by Philolaus.[114] According to Burkert, Pythagoras never dealt with numbers at all, let alone made any noteworthy contribution to mathematics.[113] Burkert argues that the only mathematics the Pythagoreans ever actually engaged in was simple, proofless arithmetic,[115]but that these arithmetic discoveries did contribute significantly to the beginnings of mathematics.[116]

Achievements

Mathematical discoveries

The Pythagorean theorem: The sum of the areas of the two squares on the legs (a and b) equals the area of the square on the hypotenuse (c).
A visual proof of the Pythagorean theorem
Although Pythagoras is most famous today for his alleged mathematical discoveries,[100] classical historians dispute whether he himself ever actually made any significant contributions to the field.[115][113] Many mathematical and scientific discoveries were attributed to Pythagoras, including his famous theorem,[117] as well as discoveries in the fields of music,[118] astronomy,[119] and medicine.[120]
Since at least the first century BC, Pythagoras has commonly been given credit for discovering the Pythagorean theorem,[121][122] a theorem in geometry that states that "in a right-angled triangle the square of the hypotenuse is equal [to the sum of] the squares of the two other sides"[123]—that is, . According to a popular legend, after he discovered this theorem, Pythagoras sacrificed an ox, or possibly even a whole hecatomb, to the gods.[123][124] Cicero rejected this story as spurious[123] because of the much more widely held belief that Pythagoras forbade blood sacrifices.[123] Porphyry attempted to explain the story by asserting that the ox was actually made of dough.[123]
The Pythagorean theorem was known and used by the Babylonians and Indians centuries before Pythagoras,[125][123][126][127] but it is possible that he may have been the first one to introduce it to the Greeks.[128][126] Some historians of mathematics have even suggested that he—or his students—may have constructed the first proof.[129] Burkert rejects this suggestion as implausible,[128] noting that Pythagoras was never credited with having proved any theorem in antiquity.[128] Furthermore, the manner in which the Babylonians employed Pythagorean numbers implies that they knew that the principle was generally applicable, and knew some kind of proof, which has not yet been found in the (still largely unpublished) cuneiform sources.[Notes 4] Pythagoras's biographers state that he also was the first to identify the five regular solids[100] and that he was the first to discover the Theory of Proportions.[100]

Musical theories and investigations


Medieval woodcut showing Pythagoras with bells and other instruments in Pythagorean tuning
According to legend, Pythagoras discovered that musical notes could be translated into mathematical equations when he passed blacksmiths at work one day[130] and heard the sound of their hammers clanging against the anvils.[130] Thinking that the sounds of the hammers were beautiful and harmonious, except for one,[131] he rushed into the blacksmith shop and began testing the hammers.[131] He then realized that the tune played when the hammer struck was directly proportional to the size of the hammer[131] and therefore concluded that music was mathematical.[131] However, this legend is demonstrably false,[132][99] as these ratios are only relevant to string length (such as the string of a monochord), and not to hammer weight.[132]

Scientific discoveries

In ancient times, Pythagoras and his contemporary Parmenides of Elea were both credited with having been the first to teach that the Earth was spherical,[133] the first to divide the globe into five climactic zones,[133] and the first to identify the morning star and the evening star as the same celestial object.[134] Of the two philosophers, Parmenides has a much stronger claim to having been the first[135] and the attribution of these discoveries to Pythagoras seems to have possibly originated from a pseudepigraphal poem.[134] Empedocles, who lived in Magna Graecia shortly after Pythagoras and Parmenides, knew that the earth was spherical.[136] By the end of the fifth century BC, this fact was universally accepted among Greek intellectuals.[137]

Legends


Pythagoras Emerging from the Underworld (1662) by Salvator Rosa
Within his own lifetime, Pythagoras was already the subject of elaborate hagiographic legends,[25][138] which he may have personally encouraged.[138] Aristotle described Pythagoras as a wonder-worker and somewhat of a supernatural figure.[139] In a fragment, Aristotle writes that Pythagoras had a golden thigh,[139] which he publicly exhibited at the Olympic Games[139][140] and showed to Abaris the Hyperborean as proof of his identity as the "Hyperborean Apollo".[139][141]
Supposedly, the priest of Apollo gave Pythagoras a magic arrow,[142] which he used to fly over long distances and perform ritual purifications.[142] He was once seen at both Metapontum and Croton at the same time.[143][25][140] When Pythagoras crossed the river Casas, "several witnesses" reported that they heard it greet him by name.[140] In Roman times, a legend claimed that Pythagoras was the son of Apollo.[144] According to Muslim tradition, Pythagoras was said to have been initiated by Hermes (Egyptian Thoth).[145]
Pythagoras was said to have dressed all in white[139][146] with a golden wreath atop his head[139] and to have worn trousersafter the fashion of the Thracians.[139] Diogenes Laërtius presents Pythagoras as having exercised remarkable self-control;[147] he was always cheerful,[147] but "abstained wholly from laughter, and from all such indulgences as jests and idle stories".[53]
Pythagoras was said to have had extraordinary success in dealing with animals.[25][148][140] A fragment from Aristotle records that, when a deadly snake bit Pythagoras, he bit it back and killed it.[142][140] Both Porphyry and Iamblichus report that Pythagoras once persuaded a bull not to eat beans[25][148] and that he once convinced a notoriously destructive bear to swear that it would never harm a living thing again, and that the bear kept its word.[25][148]
Anti-Pythagorean legends were also circulated.[149] Diogenes Laërtes retells a story told by Hermippus of Samos, which states that Pythagoras had once gone into an underground room, telling everyone that he was descending to the underworld.[150] He stayed in this room for months, while his mother secretly recorded everything that happened during his absence.[150] After he returned from this room, Pythagoras recounted everything that had happened while he was gone,[150]convincing everyone that he had really been in the underworld[150] and leading them to trust him with their wives.[150]

Pythagoreanism


Pythagoreans Celebrate the Sunrise (1869) by Fyodor Bronnikov
Both Plato and Isocrates affirm that, above all else, Pythagoras was famous for leaving behind him a way of life.[151][152][153] Carl B. Boyer (1968) characterizes the Pythagorean school as "politically conservative and with a strict code of conduct."[38] Leonid Zhmud (2012) identifies two camps within the early Pythagoreans: the scientific mathematikoiand the religious akousmatikoi, who engaged in politics.[65] The study of mathematics and music may have been connected to the worship of Apollo.[154]

Communal lifestyle

The organization Pythagoras founded at Croton was called a "school",[155][156] but, in many ways, resembled a monastery.[157] The adherents were bound by a vow to Pythagoras and each other, for the purpose of pursuing the religious and ascetic observances, and of studying his religious and philosophical theories.[158] The members of the sect shared all their possessions in common[159] and were devoted to each other to the exclusion of outsiders.[160][161] One Pythagorean maxim was "koinà tà phílōn" ("All things in common among friends").[159] Both Iamblichus and Porphyry provide detailed accounts of the organization of the school, although the primary interest of both writers is not historical accuracy, but rather to present Pythagoras as a divine figure, sent by the gods to benefit humankind.[162] Iamblichus, in particular, presents the "Pythagorean Way of Life" as a pagan alternative to the Christian monastic communities of his own time.[157]
Pythagorean teachings were known as "symbols" (symbolon)[50] and members took a vow of silence that they would not reveal these symbols to non-members.[163][50][152] Those who did not obey the laws of the community were expelled[164] and the remaining members would erect tombstones for them as though they had died.[164] A number of "oral sayings" (akoúsmata) attributed to Pythagoras have survived,[165][16] dealing with how members of the Pythagorean community should perform sacrifices, how they should honor the gods, how they should "move from here", and how they should be buried.[166] Many of these sayings emphasize the importance of ritual purity and avoiding defilement,[167][83] but their exact meanings are frequently obscure.[168] Iamblichus preserves Aristotle's descriptions of the original, ritualistic intentions behind a few of these sayings,[169] but these apparently later fell out of fashion, because Porphyry provides markedly different ethical-philosophical interpretations of them:
Pythagorean sayingOriginal ritual purpose according to Aristotle/IamblichusPorphyry's philosophical interpretation
"Do not take roads traveled by the public.""Fear of being defiled by the impure""with this he forbade following the opinions of the masses, yet to follow the ones of the few and the educated."
"and [do] not wear images of the gods on rings""Fear of defiling them by wearing them.""One should not have the teaching and knowledge of the gods quickly at hand and visible [for everyone], nor communicate them to the masses."
"and pour libations for the gods from a drinking cup's handle [the 'ear']""Efforts to keep the divine and the human strictly separate""thereby he enigmatically hints that the gods should be honored and praised with music; for it goes through the ears."
New initiates were allegedly not permitted to meet Pythagoras until after they had completed a five-year initiation period,[36] during which they were required to remain silent.[36]Sources indicate that Pythagoras himself was unusually progressive in his attitudes towards women[49] and female members of Pythagoras's school appear to have played an active role in its operations.[50][49] Iamblichus provides a list of 235 famous Pythagoreans,[51] seventeen of whom are women.[51] In later times, many prominent female philosophers contributed to the development of Neopythagoreanism.[172]

Music and athletics


French manuscript from 1512/1514, showing Pythagoras turning his face away from fava beans in revulsion
The Pythagoreans believed that music was a purification for the soul, just as medicine was a purification for the body.[94] One anecdote of Pythagoras reports that when he encountered some drunken youths trying to break into the home of a virtuous woman, he sang a solemn tune with long spondees and the boys' "raging willfulness" was quelled.[94] The Pythagoreans also placed particular emphasis on the importance of physical exercise;[157] therapeutic dancing, daily morning walks along scenic routes, and athletics were major components of the Pythagorean lifestyle.[157] Moments of contemplation at the beginning and end of each day were also advised.[173]

Asceticism and possible vegetarianism

Pythagoreanism entailed a number of ascetic practices (many of which may have had symbolic meanings).[83][174] It is more or less agreed that Pythagoras issued a prohibition against the consumption of beans[175] and the meat of non-sacrificial animals,[176] though both of these assumptions have been contradicted.[177][178] It is also likely that he prohibited his followers from wearing woolen garments.[176] Some ancient writers present Pythagoras as enforcing a strictly vegetarian diet,[Notes 5][152][179] which may have been motivated due to the doctrine of metempsychosis.[180][152][179] Eudoxus of Cnidus, a student of Archytas, writes, "Pythagoras was distinguished by such purity and so avoided killing and killers that he not only abstained from animal foods, but even kept his distance from cooks and hunters."[181][182] Other authorities contradict this statement.[183] According to Aristoxenus,[184] Pythagoras allowed the use of all kinds of animal food except the flesh of oxen used for ploughing, and rams.[185][182] According to Heraclides Ponticus, Pythagoras ate the meat from sacrifices[182] and established a diet for athletes dependent on meat.[182] Temperance of all kinds seems to have been urged. It is also stated that they had common meals, resembling the Spartan system, at which they met in companies of ten.[186]

Legacy

Influence on philosophy

Archytas and Plato


Medieval manuscript of Calcidius's Latin translation of Plato's Timaeus, which is one of the Platonic dialogues with the most overt Pythagorean influences[187]
Sizeable Pythagorean communities existed in Magna Graecia, Phlius, and Thebes during the early fourth century BC.[188] Around the same time, the Pythagorean philosopher Archytas was highly influential on the politics of the city of Tarentum in Magna Graecia.[189] According to later tradition, Archytas was elected as strategos ("general") seven times, even though others were prohibited from serving for more than a year, and never lost a single battle.[189] Archytas was also a renowned mathematician and musician.[190] He was a close friend of Plato[191] and he is quoted in Plato's Republic.[192][193]
Aristotle states that the philosophy of Plato was heavily dependent on the teachings of the Pythagoreans.[194][195] Cicero repeats this statement, remarking that Platonem ferunt didicisse Pythagorea omnia ("They say Plato learned all things Pythagorean").[196]According to Charles H. Kahn, Plato's middle dialogues, including MenoPhaedo, and The Republic, have a strong "Pythagorean coloring",[197] and his last few dialogues (particularly Philebus and Timaeus)[187] are extremely Pythagorean in character.[187]
According to R. M. Hare, Plato's Republic may be partially based on the "tightly organised community of like-minded thinkers" established by Pythagoras at Croton.[198] Additionally, Plato may have taken from Pythagoras the idea that mathematics and abstract thought are a secure basis for philosophy, as well as "for substantial theses in science and morals".[198] Plato and Pythagoras shared a "mystical approach to the soul and its place in the material world"[198] and it is probable that both were influenced by Orphism.[198] The historian of philosophy Frederick Copleston states that Plato probably borrowed his tripartite theory of the soul from the Pythagoreans.[199] Bertrand Russell, in his A History of Western Philosophy, contends that the influence of Pythagoras on Plato and others was so great that he should be considered the most influential philosopher of all time.[200] He concludes that "I do not know of any other man who has been as influential as he was in the school of thought."[201]

Middle Platonism and Neopythagoreanism

A revival of Pythagorean teachings occurred in the first century BC[202] when Middle Platonist philosophers such as Eudorus and Philo of Alexandria hailed the rise of a "new" Pythagoreanism in Alexandria.[203] At around the same time, Neopythagoreanism became prominent.[204] The first-century AD philosopher Apollonius of Tyana sought to emulate Pythagoras and live by Pythagorean teachings.[205] The later first-century Neopythagorean philosopher Moderatus of Gades expanded on Pythagorean number philosophy[205] and probably understood the soul as a "kind of mathematical harmony."[205] The Neopythagorean mathematician and musicologist Nicomachus likewise expanded on Pythagorean numerology and music theory.[204] Numenius of Apamea interpreted Plato's teachings in light of Pythagorean doctrines.[206]

Influence on art and architecture


Hadrian's Pantheon in Rome, depicted in this eighteenth-century painting by Giovanni Paolo Panini, was built according to Pythagorean teachings.[207]
Greek sculpture sought to represent the permanent reality behind superficial appearances.[208] Early Archaic sculpture represents life in simple forms, and may have been influenced by the earliest Greek natural philosophies.[Notes 6] The Greeks generally believed that nature expressed itself in ideal forms and was represented by a type (εἶδος), which was mathematically calculated.[209][210] When dimensions changed, architects sought to relay permanence through mathematics.[211][212] Maurice Bowra believes that these ideas influenced the theory of Pythagoras and his students, who believed that "all things are numbers".[212]
During the sixth century BC, the number philosophy of the Pythagoreans triggered a revolution in Greek sculpture.[213] Greek sculptors and architects attempted to find the mathematical relation (canon) behind aesthetic perfection.[210] Possibly drawing on the ideas of Pythagoras,[210] the sculptor Polykleitos writes in his Canon that beauty consists in the proportion, not of the elements (materials), but of the interrelation of parts with one another and with the whole.[214][210] In the Greek architectural orders, every element was calculated and constructed by mathematical relations. Rhys Carpenter states that the ratio 2:1 was "the generative ratio of the Doric order, and in Hellenistic times an ordinary Doric colonnade, beats out a rhythm of notes."[210]
The oldest known building designed according to Pythagorean teachings is the Porta Maggiore Basilica,[215] a subterranean basilica which was built during the reign of the Roman emperor Nero as a secret place of worship for Pythagoreans.[216] The basilica was built underground because of the Pythagorean emphasis on secrecy[217] and also because of the legend that Pythagoras had sequestered himself in an underground cave on Samos.[218] The basilica's apse is in the east and its atrium in the west out of respect for the rising sun.[219] It has a narrow entrance leading to a small pool where the initiates could purify themselves.[220] The building is also designed according to Pythagorean numerology,[221] with each table in the sanctuary providing seats for seven people.[110] Three aisles lead to a single altar, symbolizing the three parts of the soul approaching the unity of Apollo.[110] The apse depicts a scene of the poetess Sappho leaping off the Leucadian cliffs, clutching her lyre to her breast, while Apollo stands beneath her, extending his right hand in a gesture of protection,[222] symbolizing Pythagorean teachings about the immortality of the soul.[222] The interior of the sanctuary is almost entirely white because the color white was regarded by Pythagoreans as sacred.[223]
The emperor Hadrian's Pantheon in Rome was also built based on Pythagorean numerology.[207] The temple's circular plan, central axis, hemispherical dome, and alignment with the four cardinal directions symbolize Pythagorean views on the order of the universe.[224] The single oculus at the top of the dome symbolizes the monad and the sun-god Apollo.[225]The twenty-eight ribs extending from the oculus symbolize the moon, because twenty-eight was the same number of months on the Pythagorean lunar calendar.[226] The five coffered rings beneath the ribs represent the marriage of the sun and moon.[105]

Later influence


Pythagoras appears in a relief sculpture on one of the archivolts over the right door of the west portal at Chartres Cathedral.[227]

Middle Ages

During the Middle Ages, Pythagoras was revered as the founder of mathematics and music, two of the Seven Liberal Arts.[227] He appears in numerous medieval depictions, in illuminated manuscripts and in the relief sculptures on the portal of the Cathedral of Chartres.[227] The Timaeus was the only dialogue of Plato to survive in Latin translation in western Europe,[227] which led William of Conches (c. 1080-1160) to declare that Plato was Pythagorean.[227] In the 1430s, the Camaldolese friar Ambrose Traversari translated Diogenes Laërtius's Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers from Greek into Latin[227] and, in the 1460s, the philosopher Marsilio Ficino translated Porphyry and Iamblichus's Lives of Pythagoras into Latin as well,[227] thereby allowing them to be read and studied by western scholars.[227] In 1494, the Greek Neopythagorean scholar Constantine Lascaris published the Golden Verses of Pythagoras, translated into Latin, with a printed edition of his Grammatica,[228] thereby bringing them to a widespread audience.[228] In 1499, he published the first Renaissance biography of Pythagoras in his work Vitae illustrium philosophorum siculorum et calabrorum, issued in Messina.[228]

Modern science

In his preface to his book On the Revolution of the Heavenly Spheres (1543), Nicolaus Copernicus cites various Pythagoreans as the most important influences on the development of his heliocentric model of the universe,[227][229] deliberately omitting mention of Aristarchus of Samos, a non-Pythagorean astronomer who had developed a fully heliocentric model in the fourth century BC, in effort to portray his model as fundamentally Pythagorean.[229] Johannes Kepler considered himself to be a Pythagorean.[230][227][231] He believed in the Pythagorean doctrine of musica universalis[232] and it was his search for the mathematical equations behind this doctrine that led to his discovery of the laws of planetary motion.[232] Kepler titled his book on the subject Harmonices Mundi (Harmonics of the World), after the Pythagorean teaching that had inspired him.[227][233] Near the conclusion of the book, Kepler describes himself falling asleep to the sound of the heavenly music, "warmed by having drunk a generous draught... from the cup of Pythagoras."[234]
Isaac Newton firmly believed in the Pythagorean teaching of the mathematical harmony and order of the universe.[235] Though Newton was notorious for rarely giving others credit for their discoveries,[236] he attributed the discovery of the Law of Universal Gravitation to Pythagoras.[236] Albert Einstein believed that a scientist may also be "a Platonist or a Pythagorean insofar as he considers the viewpoint of logical simplicity as an indispensable and effective tool of his research."[237] The English philosopher Alfred North Whiteheadargued that "In a sense, Plato and Pythagoras stand nearer to modern physical science than does Aristotle. The two former were mathematicians, whereas Aristotle was the son of a doctor".[238] By this measure, Whitehead declared that Einstein and other modern scientists like him are "following the pure Pythagorean tradition."[237][239]

Vegetarianism


Pythagoras Advocating Vegetarianism (1618-1620) by Peter Paul Rubens was inspired by Pythagoras's speech in Ovid's Metamorphoses.[240] The painting portrays the Pythagoreans with corpulent bodies, indicating a belief that vegetarianism was healthful and nutritious.[240]
A fictionalized portrayal of Pythagoras appears in Book XV of Ovid's Metamorphoses,[241] in which he delivers a speech imploring his followers to adhere to a strictly vegetarian diet.[242] It was through Arthur Golding's 1567 English translation of Ovid's Metamorphoses that Pythagoras was best known to English-speakers throughout the early modern period.[242] John Donne's Progress of the Soul discusses the implications of the doctrines expounded in the speech[243] and Michel de Montaigne quoted the speech no less than three times in his treatise Of Cruelty to voice his moral objections against eating meat.[243] William Shakespeare references the speech in his play The Merchant of Venice.[244] John Dryden included a translation of the scene with Pythagoras in his 1700 work Fables, Ancient and Modern[243] and John Gay's 1726 fable "Pythagoras and the Countryman" reiterates its major themes, linking carnivorism with tyranny.[243] Lord Chesterfield records that his conversion to vegetarianism had been motivated by reading Pythagoras's speech in Ovid's Metamorphoses.[243] Until the word vegetarianism was coined in the 1840s, vegetarians were referred to in English as "Pythagoreans".[243] Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote an ode entitled "To the Pythagorean Diet"[245] and Leo Tolstoy adopted the Pythagorean diet himself.[245]

Western esotericism

Early modern European esotericism drew heavily on the teachings of Pythagoras.[227] The German humanist scholar Johannes Reuchlin (1455–1522) synthesized Pythagoreanism with Christian theology and Jewish Kabbalah,[246] arguing that Kabbalah and Pythagoreanism were both inspired by Mosaic tradition[247] and that Pythagoras was therefore a kabbalist. In his dialogue De verbo mirifico (1494), Reuchlin compared the Pythagorean tetractys to the ineffable divine name YHWH, ascribing each of the four letters of the tetragrammaton a symbolic meaning according to Pythagorean mystical teachings.
Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa's popular and influential three-volume treatise De Occulta Philosophia cites Pythagoras as a "religious magi" and indicates that Pythagoras's mystical numerology operates on a supercelestial level. The freemasons deliberately modeled their society on the community founded by Pythagoras at Croton. Rosicrucianism used Pythagorean symbolism, as did Robert Fludd (1574–1637), who believed his own musical writings to have been inspired by Pythagoras. John Dee was heavily influenced by Pythagorean ideology, particularly the teaching that all things are made of numbers. Adam Weishaupt, the founder of the Illuminati, was a strong admirer of Pythagoras and, in his book Pythagoras (1787), he advocated that society should be reformed to be more like Pythagoras's commune at Croton. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart incorporated Masonic and Pythagorean symbolism into his opera The Magic FluteSylvain Maréchal, in his six-volume 1799 biography The Voyages of Pythagoras, declared that all revolutionaries in all time periods are the "heirs of Pythagoras".