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The Pythagorean Society, II

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Title: The Pythagorean Society, II


1
The Pythagorean Society, II
  • The Pythagoreans regarded numbers spatially One
    is the point, two is the line, three is the
    surface, four is the solid or body. Every
    material body is the expression of the number
    four, since it results, as a fourth term, from
    three constituent elements (points, lines, and
    surfaces). Justice is declared to be four. Five
    is declared to be marriage, because five is the
    product of three (the first masculine number) and
    two (the first feminine number).

2
The Pythagorean Society, III
  • To the Pythagoreans the earth is not the center
    of the universe. The earth and the planets
    revolve, along with the sun, round the central
    fire or hearth of the universe.

3
Heraclitus I
  • An Ephesian noble, a melancholy man who expressed
    his contempt for the common herd of citizens as
    well as for the eminent men of the past.
  • Many of Heraclituss sayings are pungent in
    character Mans character is his fate, Nature
    loves to hide, All things are in a state of
    flux.

4
Heraclitus II
  • The original contribution of Heraclitus to
    philosophy is his conception of unity in
    diversity, diversity in unity. One in many, many
    in one. Identity in difference, difference in
    identity. He use to say men do not know how
    what is at variance agrees with itself.
  • For him the Urstoff is fire.

5
The Eleatics Parmenides, I
  • ParmenidesA citizen of Elea (Southern Italy) and
    the founder of the Eleatic School
  • He argues that Being, the One, is, and that
    Becoming, change, is illusion.
  • In rejecting change and movement, Parmenides
    rejects sense-appearance and appeal to reason. He
    introduces into philosophy the distinction
    between Reason and Sense, Truth and Appearance,
    something of cardinal importance in Platonic
    philosophy.
  • His philosophy is not idealism but monistic
    materialism (the reality that the reason
    apprehends is material).

6
The Eleatics Parmenides, II
  • His first great assertion is that It is. It,
    i.e., Reality, Being, exists and cannot not be.
    It was not first possible, i.e., nothing, and
    then existent it was always existent. It never
    came into being, but simply is. What is, is
    uncreated, indestructible and without end.
  • Plato uses the thesis of Parmenides concerning
    the unchangeability of Being and attributes it to
    Ideas rather that the material world.

7
The Eleatics Parmenides, III
  • Heraclitus affirmed the existence of the One or
    Being but argued that becoming, change and
    tension are essential to the One. Parmenides, on
    the other hand, asserted Being even to the
    exclusion of Becoming, affirming that change and
    movement are illusory. Sense tells us that there
    is change but truth is to be sought, not in
    sense, but in reason and thought.

8
The Eleatics Zeno of Elea
  • He argues for the impossibility of motion. His
    first argument is as follows Let us suppose that
    you want to cross a stadium. In order to do so,
    you would have to traverse an infinite number of
    points (on the Pythagorean hypothesis). Moreover,
    you would have to travel the distance in finite
    time, if you wanted to get to the other side at
    all. But how can you traverse an infinite number
    of points, and so an infinite distance, in a
    finite time? We must conclude that you cannot
    cross the stadium. Indeed we must conclude that
    no object can traverse any distance whatsoever
    and that all motion is consequently impossible

9
Anaxagoras I
  • A Persian citizen who came with the Persian army
    in the year of Salamis (480/479 BC) and settled
    in Athens. He was the first philosopher to settle
    in Athens which was later to become such a
    flourishing center of philosophic study.
  • From Plato we hear that the young Pericles was a
    pupil of Anaxagoras

10
Anaxagoras II
  • Anaxagoras accepted the theory of Parmenides that
    Being neither comes into being nor passes away,
    but is unchangeable.
  • For him the Urstoff is Nous or mind but he
    described it in material terms as being the
    thinnest of all things. He made Nous purer than
    any material thing but never reached the idea of
    the immaterial or incorporeal thing.

11
Architecture
  • Most important structures were temples
  • Generic Greek architectural style was called
    post-beam-triangle construction.
  • Doric Style the earliest temple style, a 4-sided
    structure with a porch winding all the way around
    an inner room, or cella (p.47)
  • Temple of Hera

12
Sculpture
  • Kouros and Kore freestanding statues of youths
    and maidens
  • Conventional memorial sculptures intended to
    honor the dead, but not the individual
  • The archaic smile
  • Early ones seem Egyptian
  • Ptoon Kouros
  • Peplos Kore
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