Pythagoras
Pythagoras founded a philosophical and religious school in Croton (now Crotone, on the east of the heel of southern Italy) that had many followers.
Pythagoras was the head of the society with an inner circle of followers known as mathematikoi.
The mathematikoi lived permanently with the Society, had no personal possessions and were vegetarians.
They were taught by Pythagoras himself and obeyed strict rules. The beliefs that Pythagoras held were:
(1) that at its deepest level, reality is mathematical in nature,
(2) that philosophy can be used for spiritual purification,
(3) that the soul can rise to union with the divine,
(4) that certain symbols have a mystical significance, and
(5) strict loyalty and secrecy.
Both men and women were permitted to become members of the Society, in fact several later women Pythagoreans became famous philosophers.
The outer circle of the Society were known as the akousmatics and they lived in their own houses, only coming to the Society during the day.
They were allowed their own possessions and were not required to be vegetarians.
Of Pythagoras’s actual work nothing is known.
His school practised secrecy and communalism making it hard to distinguish between the work of Pythagoras and that of his followers.
Certainly his school made outstanding contributions to mathematics, and it is possible to be fairly certain about some of Pythagoras’s mathematical contributions.
19th.century
French
anonymous.
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