Pythagoras

Pythagoras
Marble bust of a man with a long, pointed beard, wearing a tainia, a kind of ancient Greek headcovering in this case resembling a turban. The face is somewhat gaunt and has prominent, but thin, eyebrows, which seem halfway fixed into a scowl. The ends of his mustache are long a trail halfway down the length of his beard to about where the bottom of his chin would be if we could see it. None of the hair on his head is visible, since it is completely covered by the tainia.
Bust of Pythagoras of Samos in the
Capitoline Museums, Rome[1]
Kamundaganc. 570 BC
Samos
Kagadananc. 495 BC (aged around 75)
either Croton or Metapontum
EraPre-Socratic philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolPythagoreanism
Main interests
Notable ideas

Attributed ideas:

Si Pythagoras kan Samos[lower-alpha 1] (c. 570 – c. 495 BC)[lower-alpha 2]sarong sinaunang Griyegong Ionian na pilosopo asin nagmukna kan Pythagoreanism. An saiyang politikal asin relihiyosong pagtukdo midbid sa Magna Graecia asin nakaimpluwensya sa mga pilosopiya ni Plato, Aristotle, asin sa Western na pilosopiya.

  1. Joost-Gaugier 2006, p. 143.
  2. American: Pythagoras, Collins Dictionary, n.d., retrieved 25 September 2014 
  3. British: Pythagoras, Collins Dictionary, n.d., retrieved 25 September 2014 
  4. William Keith Chambers Guthrie, (1978), A history of Greek philosophy, Volume 1: The earlier Presocratics and the Pythagoreans, p. 173. Cambridge University Press


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