LIFE OF PYTHAGORAS
I. Since we have now gone through the Ionian philosophy,
which was derived from Thales, and the lives of the several
illustrious men who were the chief ornaments of that school;
we will now proceed to treat of the Italian School, which was
founded by Pythagoras, the son of Mnesarchus, a seal engraver,
as he is recorded to have been by Hermippus; a native of
Samos, or as Aristoxenus asserts, a Tyrrhenian, and a native
of one of the islands which the Athenians occupied after they
had driven out the Tyrrhenians. But some authors say that
he was the son of Marmacus, the son of Hippasus, the son of
Euthyphron, the son of Cleonymus, who was an exile from
Phlias; and that Marmacus settled in Samos, and that from
this circumstance Pythagoras was called a Samian. After
that he migrated to Lesbos, having come to Pherecydes with
letters of recommendation from Zoilus, his uncle. And having
made three silver goblets, he carried them to Egypt as a
present for each of the three priests. He had brothers, the
eldest of whom was named Eunomus, the middle one Tyrrhenus,
and a slave named Zamolxis, to whom the Getæ sacrifice,
believing him to be the same as Saturn, according to the
account of Herodotus.
II. He was a pupil, as I have already mentioned, of
Pherecydes, the Syrian; and after his death he came to
Samos, and became a pupil of Hermodamas, the descendant
of Creophylus, who was by this time an old man.
III. And as he was a young man, and devoted to learning,
he quitted his country, and got initiated into all the Grecian
and barbarian sacred mysteries. Accordingly, he went to
Egypt, on which occasion Polycrates gave him a letter of
introduction to Amasis; and he learnt the Egyptian language,
as Antipho tells us, in his treatise on those men who have
been conspicuous for virtue, and he associated with the
Chaldæans and with the Magi.
Afterwards he went to Crete, and in company with Epimenides,
he descended into the Idæan cave, (and in Egypt
too, he entered into the holiest parts of their temples,) and
learned all the most secret mysteries that relate to their
Gods. Then he returned back again to Samos, and finding
his country reduced under the absolute dominion of Polycrates,
he set sail, and fled to Crotona in Italy. And there,
having given laws to the Italians, he gained a very high
reputation, together with his scholars, who were about three
hundred in number, and governed the republic in a most
excellent manner; so that the constitution was very nearly
an aristocracy.
IV. Heraclides Ponticus says, that he was accustomed to
speak of himself in this manner; that he had formerly been
Æthalides, and had been accounted the son of Mercury;
and that Mercury had desired him to select any gift he
pleased except immortality. And that he accordingly had
requested that, whether living or dead, he might preserve the
memory of what had happened to him. While, therefore,
he was alive, he recollected everything; and when he was
dead, he retained the same memory. And at a subsequent
period he passed into Euphorbus, and was wounded by
Menelaus. And while he was Euphorbus, he used to say
that he had formerly been Æthalides; and that he had
received as a gift from Mercury the perpetual transmigration
of his soul, so that it was constantly transmigrating and
passing into whatever plants or animals it pleased; and he
had also received the gift of knowing and recollecting all
that his soul had suffered in hell, and what sufferings too
are endured by the rest of the souls.
But after Euphorbus died, he said that his soul had passed
into Hermotimus; and when he wished to convince people
of this, he went into the territory of the Branchidæ, and
going into the temple of Apollo, he showed his shield which
Menelaus had dedicated there as an offering. For he said
that he, when he sailed from Troy, had offered up his shield
which was already getting worn out, to Apollo, and that nothing
remained but the ivory face which was on it. And when
Hermotimus died, then he said that he had become Pyrrhus, a
fisherman of Delos; and that he still recollected everything,
how he had been formerly Æthalides, then Euphorbus, then
Hermotimus, and then Pyrrhus. And when Pyrrhus died,
he became Pythagoras, and still recollected all the circumstances
that I have been mentioning.
V. Now, some people say that Pythagoras did not leave behind
him a single book; but they talk foolishly; for Heraclitus,
the natural philosopher, speaks plainly enough of him, saying,
“Pythagoras, the son of Mnesarchus, was the most learned
of all men in history; and having selected from these writings,
he thus formed his own wisdom and extensive learning, and
mischievous art.” And he speaks thus, because Pythagoras,
in the beginning of his treatise on Natural Philosophy, writes
in the following manner: “By the air which I breathe, and
by the water which I drink, I will not endure to be blamed
on account of this discourse.”
And there are three volumes extant written by Pythagoras.
One on Education; one on Politics; and one on Natural
Philosophy. But the treatise which is now extant under the
name of Pythagoras is the work of Lysis, of Tarentum, a
philosopher of the Pythagorean School, who fled to Thebes,
and became the master of Epaminondas. And Heraclides,
the son of Sarapion, in his Abridgment of Sotion, says that
he wrote a poem in epic verse on the Universe; and besides
that a sacred poem, which begins thus;—
Dear youths, I warn you cherish peace divine,
And in your hearts lay deep these words of mine.
A third about the Soul; a fourth on Piety; a fifth entitled
Helothales, which was the name of the father of Epicharmus,
of Cos; a sixth called Crotona, and other poems too. But
the mystic discourse which is extant under his name, they say
is really the work of Hippasus, having been composed with a
view to bring Pythagoras into disrepute. There were also
many other books composed by Aston, of Crotona, and attributed
to Pythagoras.
Aristoxenus asserts that Pythagoras derived the greater
part of his ethical doctrines from Themistoclea, the priestess
at Delphi. And Ion, of Chios, in his Victories, says that he
wrote some poems and attributed them to Orpheus. They
also say that the poem called the Scopiadæ is by him, which
begins thus:—
Behave not shamelessly to any one.
VI. And Sosicrates, in his Successions, relates that he,
having being asked by Leon, the tyrant of the Phliasians, who
he was, replied, “A philosopher.” And adds, that he used
to compare life to a festival. “And as some people came to
a festival to contend for the prizes, and others for the purposes
of traffic, and the best as spectators; so also in life, the men
of slavish dispositions,” said he, “are born hunters after glory
and covetousness, but philosophers are seekers after truth.”
And thus he spoke on this subject. But in the three treatises
above mentioned, the following principles are laid down by
Pythagoras generally.
He forbids men to pray for anything in particular for themselves,
because they do not know what is good for them. He
calls drunkenness an expression identical with ruin, and
rejects all superfluity, saying, “That no one ought to exceed
the proper quantity of meat and drink.” And on the subject
of venereal pleasures, he speaks thus:—“One ought to sacrifice
to Venus in the winter, not in the summer; and in autumn
and spring in a lesser degree. But the practice is pernicious
at every season, and is never good for the health.” And once,
when he was asked when a man might indulge in the pleasures
of love, he replied, “Whenever you wish to be weaker than
yourself.”
VII. And he divides the life of man thus. A boy for
twenty years; a young man (νεάνισκος) for twenty years; a
middle-aged man (νεανίας) for twenty years; an old man for
twenty years. And these different ages correspond proportionably
to the seasons: boyhood answers to spring; youth to
summer; middle age to autumn; and old age to winter. And
he uses νεάνισκος here as equivalent to μειράκιον, and νεανίας as
equivalent to ἀνὴρ.
VIII. He was the first person, as Timæus says, who
asserted that the property of friends is common, and that
friendship is equality. And his disciples used to put all their
possessions together into one store, and use them in common;
and for five years they kept silence, doing nothing but listen
to discourses, and never once seeing Pythagoras, until they
were approved; after that time they were admitted into his
house, and allowed to see him. They also abstained from the
use of cypress coffins, because the sceptre of Jupiter was made
of that wood, as Hermippus tells us in the second book of
his account of Pythagoras.
IX. He is said to have been a man of the most dignified
appearance, and his disciples adopted an opinion respecting
him, that he was Apollo who had come from the Hyperboreans;
and it is said, that once when he was stripped naked,
he was seen to have a golden thigh. And there were many
people who affirmed, that when he was crossing the river
Nessus it addressed him by his name.
X. Timæus, in the tenth book of his Histories, tells us,
that he used to say that women who were married to men
had the names of the Gods, being successively called virgins,
then nymphs, and subsequently mothers.
XI. It was Pythagoras also who carried geometry to perfection,
after Mœris had first found out the principles of the
elements of that science, as Aristiclides tells us in the second
book of his History of Alexander; and the part of the science
to which Pythagoras applied himself above all others was
arithmetic. He also discovered the numerical relation of
sounds on a single string: he also studied medicine. And
Apollodorus, the logician, records of him, that he sacrificed a
hecatomb, when he had discovered that the square of the
hypothenuse of a right-angled triangle is equal to the squares
of the sides containing the right angle. And there is an
epigram which is couched in the following terms:—
When the great Samian sage his noble problem found,
A hundred oxen dyed with their life-blood the ground.
XII. He is also said to have been the first man who
trained athletes on meat; and Eurymenes was the first man,
according to the statement of Phavorinus, in the third book of
his Commentaries, who ever did submit to this diet, as before
that time men used to train themselves on dry figs and
moist cheese, and wheaten bread; as the same Phavorinus
informs us in the eighth book of his Universal History. But
some authors state, that a trainer of the name of Pythagoras
certainly did train his athletes on this system, but that it was
not our philosopher; for that he even forbade men to kill
animals at all, much less would have allowed his disciples to
eat them, as having a right to live in common with mankind.
And this was his pretext; but in reality he prohibited the
eating of animals, because he wished to train and accustom
men to simplicity of life, so that all their food should be easily
procurable, as it would be, if they ate only such things as
required no fire to dress them, and if they drank plain water;
for from this diet they would derive health of body and
acuteness of intellect.
The only altar at which he worshipped was that of Apollo
the Father, at Delos, which is at the back of the altar of
Ceratinus, because wheat, and barley, and cheese-cakes are
the only offerings laid upon it, being not dressed by fire; and
no victim is ever slain there, as Aristotle tells us in his
Constitution of the Delians. They say, too, that he was the
first person who asserted that the soul went a necessary circle
being changed about and confined at different times in different
bodies.
XIII. He was also the first person who introduced measures
and weights among the Greeks; as Aristoxenus the
musician informs us.
XIV. Parmenides, too, assures us, that he was the first
person who asserted the identity of Hesperus and Lucifer.
XV. And he was so greatly admired, that they used to say
that his friends looked on all his sayings as the oracles of
God. And he himself says in his writings, that he had come
among men after having spent two hundred and seven years
in the shades below. Therefore the Lucanians and the
Peucetians, and the Messapians, and the Romans, flocked
around him, coming with eagerness to hear his discourses;
but until the time of Philolaus there were no doctrines of
Pythagoras ever divulged; and he was the first person who
published the three celebrated books which Plato wrote to
have purchased for him for a hundred minæ. Nor were the
number of his scholars who used to come to him by night
fewer than six hundred. And if any of them had ever been
permitted to see him, they wrote of it to their friends, as if
they had gained some great advantage.
The people of Metapontum used to call his house the
temple of Ceres; and the street leading to it they called the
street of the Muses, as we are told by Phavorinus in his
Universal History.
And the rest of the Pythagoreans used to say, according to
the account given by Aristoxenus, in the tenth book of his
Laws on Education, that his precepts ought not to be divulged
to all the world; and Xenophilus, the Pythagorean, when he
was asked what was the best way for a man to educate his son,
said, “That he must first of all take care that he was born in
a city which enjoyed good laws.”
Pythagoras, too, formed many excellent men in Italy, by
his precepts, and among them Zaleucus, and Charondas,
the lawgivers.
XVI. For he was very eminent for his power of attracting
friendships; and among other things, if ever he heard that
any one had any community of symbols with him, he at once
made him a companion and a friend.
XVII. Now, what he called his symbols were such as these.
“Do not stir the fire with a sword.” “Do not sit down on a
bushel.” “Do not devour your heart.” “Do not aid men in
discarding a burden, but in increasing one.” “Always have
your bed packed up.” “Do not bear the image of a God on a
ring.” “Efface the traces of a pot in the ashes.” “Do not
wipe a seat with a lamp.” “Do not make water in the sunshine.”
“Do not walk in the main street.” “Do not offer
your right hand lightly.” “Do not cherish swallows under
your roof.” “Do not cherish birds with crooked talons.” “Do
not defile; and do not stand upon the parings of your nails, or
the cuttings of your hair.” “Avoid a sharp sword.” “When
you are travelling abroad, look not back at your own borders.”
Now the precept not to stir fire with a sword meant, not to
provoke the anger or swelling pride of powerful men; not to
violate the beam of the balance meant, not to transgress fairness
and justice; not to sit on a bushel is to have an equal
care for the present and for the future, for by the bushel is
meant one’s daily food. By not devouring one’s heart, he
intended to show that we ought not to waste away our souls
with grief and sorrow. In the precept that a man when
travelling abroad should not turn his eyes back, he recommended
those who were departing from life not to be desirous
to live, and not to be too much attracted by the pleasures here
on earth. And the other symbols may be explained in a
similar manner, that we may not be too prolix here.
XVIII. And above all things, he used to prohibit the eating
of the erythinus, and the melanurus; and also, he enjoined
his disciples to abstain from the hearts of animals, and from
beans. And Aristotle informs us, that he sometimes used also
to add to these prohibitions paunches and mullet. And some
authors assert that he himself used to be contented with honey
and honeycomb, and bread, and that he never drank wine in
the day time. And his desert was usually vegetables, either
boiled or raw; and he very rarely ate fish. His dress was
white, very clean, and his bed-clothes were also white, and
woollen, for linen had not yet been introduced into that
country. He was never known to have eaten too much, or to
have drunk too much, or to indulge in the pleasures of love.
He abstained wholly from laughter, and from all such indulgences
as jests and idle stories. And when he was angry, he
never chastised any one, whether slave or freeman. He used
to call admonishing, feeding storks.
He used to practise divination, as far as auguries and
auspices go, but not by means of burnt offerings, except only
the burning of frankincense. And all the sacrifices which he
offered consisted of inanimate things. But some, however,
assert that he did sacrifice animals, limiting himself to cocks,
and sucking kids, which are called ἁπάλιοι, but that he very
rarely offered lambs. Aristoxenus, however, affirms that he
permitted the eating of all other animals, and only abstained
from oxen used in agriculture, and from rams.
XIX. The same author tells us, as I have already mentioned,
that he received his doctrines from Themistoclea, at Delphi.
And Hieronymus says, that when he descended to the shades
below, he saw the soul of Hesiod bound to a brazen pillar, and
gnashing its teeth; and that of Homer suspended from a tree,
and snakes around it, as a punishment for the things that they
had said of the Gods. And that those people also were punished
who refrained from commerce with their wives; and that on
account of this he was greatly honoured by the people of
Crotona.
But Aristippus, of Cyrene, in his Account of Natural Philosophers,
says that Pythagoras derived his name from the fact
of his speaking (ἀγορεύειν) truth no less than the God at Delphi
(τοῦ πυθίου).
It is said that he used to admonish his disciples to repeat
these lines to themselves whenever they returned home to their
houses:—
In what have I transgress’d? What have I done?
What that I should have done have I omitted?
And that he used to forbid them to offer victims to the Gods,
ordering them to worship only at those altars which were unstained
with blood. He forbade them also to swear by the
Gods; saying, “That every man ought so to exercise himself,
as to be worthy of belief without an oath.” He also taught
men that it behoved them to honour their elders, thinking that
which was precedent in point of time more honourable; just
as in the world, the rising of the sun was more so than the
setting; in life, the beginning more so than the end; and in
animals, production more so than destruction.
Another of his rules was that men should honour the Gods
above the dæmones, heroes above men; and of all men parents
were entitled to the highest degree of reverence. Another,
that people should associate with one another in such a way as
not to make their friends enemies, but to render their enemies
friends. Another was that they should think nothing exclusively
their own. Another was to assist the law, and to make
war upon lawlessness. Not to destroy or injure a cultivated
tree, nor any animal either which does not injure men. That
modesty and decorum consisted in never yielding to laughter,
and yet not looking stern. He taught that men should avoid
too much flesh, that they should in travelling let rest and
exertion alternate; that they should exercise memory; that
they should never say or do anything in anger; that they should
not pay respect to every kind of divination; that they should
use songs set to the lyre; and by hymns to the Gods and to
eminent men, display a reasonable gratitude to them.
He also forbade his disciples to eat beans, because, as they
were flatulent, they greatly partook of animal properties he
also said that men kept their stomachs in better order by
avoiding them; and that such abstinence made the visions
which appear in one’s sleep gentle and free from agitation.
Alexander also says, in his Successions of Philosophers, that
he found the following dogmas also set down in the Commentaries
of Pythagoras:—
That the monad was the beginning of everything. From
the monad proceeds an indefinite duad, which is subordinate
to the monad as to its cause. That from the monad and the
indefinite duad proceed numbers. And from numbers signs.
And from these last, lines of which plane figures consist. And
from plane figures are derived solid bodies. And from solid
bodies sensible bodies, of which last there are four elements;
fire, water, earth, and air. And that the world, which is endued
with life, and intellect, and which is of a spherical figure,
having the earth, which is also spherical, and inhabited all
over in its centre, results from a combination of these elements,
and derives its motion from them; and also that there are
antipodes, and that what is below, as respects us, is above in
respect of them.
He also taught that light and darkness and cold and heat,
and dryness and moisture, were equally divided in the world;
and that, while heat was predominant it was summer; while
cold had the mastery it was winter; when dryness prevailed
it was spring; and when moisture preponderated, winter. And
while all these qualities were on a level, then was the loveliest
season of the year; of which the flourishing spring was the
wholesome period, and the season of autumn the most pernicious
one. Of the day, he said that the flourishing period was the
morning, and the fading one the evening; on which account
that also was the least healthy time.
Another of his theories was, that the air around the earth
was immoveable, and pregnant with disease, and that everything
in it was mortal; but that the upper air was in perpetual
motion, and pure and salubrious; and that everything in that
was immortal, and on that account divine. And that the sun,
and the moon, and the stars, were all Gods; for in them the
warm principle predominates which is the cause of life. And
that the moon derives its light from the sun. And that there
is a relationship between men and the Gods, because men
partake of the divine principle; on which account also, God
exercises his providence for our advantage. Also, that fate is
the cause of the arrangement of the world both generally and
particularly. Moreover, that a ray from the sun penetrated
both the cold æther and the dense æther; and they call the
air (ἀὴρ), the cold æther (ψυχρὸν αἰθέρα), and the sea and
moisture they call the dense æther (παχὺν αἰθέρα). And this
ray descends into the depths, and in this way vivifies everything.
And everything which partakes of the principle of
heat lives, on which account also plants are animated beings;
but that all living things have not necessarily souls. And
that the soul is a something torn off from the æther, both
warm and cold, from its partaking of the cold æther. And
that the soul is something different from life. Also, that it is
immortal, because that from which it has been detached is
immortal.
Also, that animals are born from one another by seeds, and
that it is impossible for there to be any spontaneous production
by the earth. And that seed is a drop from the brain which
contains in itself a warm vapour; and that when this is applied
to the womb, it transmits virtue, and moisture, and blood from
the brain, from which flesh, and sinews, and bones, and hair,
and the whole body are produced. And from the vapour is
produced the soul, and also sensation. And that the infant
first becomes a solid body at the end of forty days; but,
according to the principles of harmony, it is not perfect till
seven, or perhaps nine, or at most ten months, and then it is
brought forth. And that it contains in itself all the principles
of life, which are all connected together, and by their union
and combination form a harmonious whole, each of them
developing itself at the appointed time.
The senses in general, and especially the sight, are a vapour
of excessive warmth, and on this account a man is said to see
through air, and through water. For the hot principle is
opposed by the cold one; since, if the vapour in the eyes were
cold, it would have the same temperature as the air, and so
would be dissipated. As it is, in some passages he calls the
eyes the gates of the sun. And he speaks in a similar manner
of hearing, and of the other senses.
He also says that the soul of man is divided into three
parts; into intuition (νοῦς), and reason (φρὴν), and mind (θυμὸς),
and that the first and last divisions are found also in other
animals, but that the middle one, reason, is only found in
man. And that the chief abode of the soul is in those parts
of the body which are between the heart and the brain. And
that that portion of it which is in the heart is the mind (θυμὸς);
but that deliberation (νοὺς), and reason (φρὴν), reside in the
brain.
Moreover, that the senses are drops from them; and that
the reasoning sense is immortal, but the others are mortal.
And that the soul is nourished by the blood; and that reasons
are the winds of the soul. That it is invisible, and so are its
reasons, since the æther itself is invisible. That the links of
the soul are the veins, and the arteries, and the nerves. But
that when it is vigorous, and is by itself in a quiescent state,
then its links are words and actions. That when it is cast
forth upon the earth it wanders about, resembling the body.
Moreover, that Mercury is the steward of the souls, and that
on this account he has the name of Conductor, and Commercial,
and Infernal, since it is he who conducts the souls from their
bodies, and from earth, and sea; and that he conducts the
pure souls to the highest region, and that he does not allow
the impure ones to approach them, nor to come near one
another; but commits them to be bound in indissoluble fetters
by the Furies. The Pythagoreans also assert, that the whole
air is full of souls, and that these are those which are accounted
dæmones, and heroes. Also, that it is by them that dreams
are sent among men, and also the tokens of disease and health;
these last too, being sent not only to men, but to sheep also,
and other cattle. Also, that it is they who are concerned with
purifications, and expiations, and all kinds of divination, and
oracular predictions, and things of that kind.
They also say, that the most important privilege in man is,
the being able to persuade his soul to either good or bad. And
that men are happy when they have a good soul; yet, that
they are never quiet, and that they never retain the same mind
long. Also, that an oath is justice; and that on that account,
Jupiter is called Jupiter of Oaths (Ὅρκιος). Also, that virtue
is harmony, and health, and universal good, and God; on which
account everything owes its existence and consistency to harmony.
Also, that friendship is a harmonious equality.
Again, they teach that one ought not to pay equal honours
to Gods and to heroes; but that one ought to honour the Gods
at all times, extolling them with praises, clothed in white
garments, and keeping one’s body chaste; but that one ought
not to pay such honour to the heroes till after midday. Also,
that a state of purity is brought about by purifications, and
washings, and sprinklings, and by a man’s purifying himself
from all funerals, or concubinage, or pollution of every kind,
and by abstaining from all flesh that has either been killed or
died of itself, and from mullets, and from melanuri, and from
eggs, and from such animals as lay eggs, and from beans, and
from other things which are prohibited by those who have the
charge of the mysteries in the temples.
And Aristotle says, in his treatise on Beans, that Pythagoras
enjoined his disciples to abstain from beans, either because
they resemble some part of the human body, or because they
are like the gates of hell (for they are the only plants without
parts); or because they dry up other plants, or because they
are representatives of universal nature, or because they are
used in elections in oligarchical governments. He also forbade
his disciples to pick up what fell from the table, for the sake
of accustoming them not to eat immoderately, or else because
such things belong to the dead.
But Aristophanes says, that what falls belongs to the heroes;
saying, in his Heroes:—
Never taste the things which fall
From the table on the floor.
He also forbade his disciples to eat white poultry, because
a cock of that colour was sacred to Month, and was also a
suppliant. He was also accounted a good animal; and he
was sacred to the God Month, for he indicates the time.
The Pythagoreans were also forbidden to eat of all fish that
were sacred; on the ground that the same animals ought not
to be served up before both Gods and men, just as the same
things do not belong to freemen and to slaves. Now, white
is an indication of a good nature, and black of a bad one.
Another of the precepts of Pythagoras was, that men ought
not to break bread; because in ancient times friends used to
assemble around one loaf, as they even now do among the
barbarians. Nor would he allow men to divide bread which
unites them. Some think that he laid down this rule in reference
to the judgment which takes place in hell; some because
this practice engenders timidity in war. According to others,
what is alluded to is the Union, which presides over the
government of the universe.
Another of his doctrines was, that of all solid figures the
sphere was the most beautiful; and of all plane figures, the
circle. That old age and all diminution were similar, and
also increase and youth were identical. That health was the
permanence of form, and disease the destruction of it. Of salt
his opinion was, that it ought to be set before people as a
reminder of justice; for salt preserves everything which it
touches, and it is composed of the purest particles of water and
sea.
These are the doctrines which Alexander asserts that he
discovered in the Pythagorean treatises; and Aristotle gives
a similar account of them.
XV. Timon, in his Silli, has not left unnoticed the dignified
appearance of Pythagoras, when he attacks him on other points.
And his words are these:—
Pythagoras, who often teaches
Precepts of magic, and with speeches
Of long high-sounding diction draws,
From gaping crowds, a vain applause.
And respecting his having been different people at different
times, Xenophanes adds his evidence in an elegiac poem which
commences thus:—
Now I will on another subject touch,
And lead the way.
And the passage in which he mentions Pythagoras is as
follows:—
They say that once, as passing by he saw
A dog severely beaten, he did pity him,
And spoke as follows to the man who beat him:—
“Stop now, and beat him not; since in his body,
Abides the soul of a dear friend of mine,
Whose voice I recognized as he was crying.”
These are the words of Xenophanes.
Cratinus also ridiculed him in his Pythagorean Woman;
but in his Tarentines, he speaks thus:—
They are accustomed, if by chance they see
A private individual abroad,
To try what powers of argument he has,
How he can speak and reason: and they bother him
With strange antithesis and forced conclusions,
Errors, comparisons, and magnitudes,
Till they have filled and quite perplex’d his mind.
And Mnesimachus says in his Alcmæon:—
As we do sacrifice to the Phœbus whom
Pythagoras worships, never eating aught
Which has the breath of life.
Aristophon says in his Pythagorean:—
A. He said that when he did descend below
Among the shades in Hell, he there beheld
All men who e’er had died; and there he saw,
That the Pythagoreans differ’d much
From all the rest; for that with them alone
Did Pluto deign to eat, much honouring
Their pious habits.
B. He’s a civil God,
If he likes eating with such dirty fellows.
And again, in the same play he says:—
They eat
Nothing but herbs and vegetables, and drink
Pure water only. But their lice are such,
Their cloaks so dirty, and their unwash’d scent
So rank, that no one of our younger men
Will for a moment bear them.
XXI. Pythagoras died in this manner. When he was
sitting with some of his companions in Milo’s house, some
one of those whom he did not think worthy of admission into
it, was excited by envy to set fire to it. But some say that
the people of Crotona themselves did this, being afraid lest he
might aspire to the tyranny. And that Pythagoras was caught
as he was trying to escape; and coming to a place full of beans,
he stopped there, saying that it was better to be caught than
to trample on the beans, and better to be slain than to speak;
and so he was murdered by those who were pursuing him.
And in this way, also, most of his companions were slain;
being in number about forty; but that a very few did escape,
among whom were Archippus, of Tarentum, and Lysis,
whom I have mentioned before.
But Dicæarchus relates that Pythagoras died afterwards,
having escaped as far as the temple of the Muses, at Metapontum,
and that he died there of starvation, having abstained
from food for forty days. And Heraclides says, in his abridgment
of the life of Satyrus, that after he had buried Pherecydes in
Delos, he returned to Italy, and finding there a superb banquet
prepared at the house of Milo, of Crotona, he left Crotona,
and went to Metapontum, and there put an end to his
life by starvation, not wishing to live any longer. But Hermippus
says, that when there was war between the people of
Agrigentum and the Syracusans, Pythagoras went out with
his usual companions, and took the part of the Agrigentines;
and as they were put to flight, he ran all round a field of
beans, instead of crossing it, and so was slain by the Syracusans;
and that the rest, being about five-and-thirty in number,
were burnt at Tarentum, when they were trying to excite
a sedition in the state against the principal magistrates.
Hermippus also relates another story about Pythagoras.
For he says that when he was in Italy, he made a subterraneous
apartment, and charged his mother to write an account
of everything that took place, marking the time of each on a
tablet, and then to send them down to him, until he came up
again; and that his mother did so; and that Pythagoras came
up again after a certain time, lean, and reduced to a skeleton;
and that he came into the public assembly, and said that he
had arrived from the shades below, and then he recited to
them all that had happened during his absence. And they,
being charmed by what he told them, wept and lamented, and
believed that Pythagoras was a divine being; so that they
even entrusted their wives to him, as likely to learn some
good from him; and that they too were called Pythagoreans.
And this is the story of Hermippus.
XXII. And Pythagoras had a wife, whose name was
Theano; the daughter of Brontinus, of Crotona. But some
say that she was the wife of Brontinus, and only a pupil of
Pythagoras. And he had a daughter named Damo, as Lysis
mentions in his letter to Hipparchus; where he speaks thus
of Pythagoras: “And many say that you philosophize in public,
as Pythagoras also used to do; who, when he had entrusted
his Commentaries to Damo, his daughter, charged her to
divulge them to no person out of the house. And she, though
she might have sold his discourses for much money, would not
abandon them, for she thought poverty and obedience to her
father’s injunctions more valuable than gold; and that too,
though she was a woman.”
He had also a son, named Telauges, who was the successor
of his father in his school, and who, according to some authors,
was the teacher of Empedocles. At least Hippobotus relates
that Empedocles said:—
“Telauges, noble youth, whom in due time,
Theano bore to wise Pythagoras.”
But there is no book extant, which is the work of Telauges,
though there are some extant, which are attributed to his
mother Theano. And they tell a story of her, that once, when
she was asked how long a woman ought to be absent from her
husband to be pure, she said, the moment she leaves her
own husband, she is pure; but she is never pure at all, after she
leaves any one else. And she recommended a woman, who was
going to her husband, to put off her modesty with her clothes,
and when she left him, to resume it again with her clothes;
and when she was asked, “What clothes?” she said, “Those
which cause you to be called a woman.”
XXIII. Now Pythagoras, as Heraclides, the son of Sarapion,
relates, died when he was eighty years of age; according
to his own account of his age, but according to the common
account, he was more than ninety. And we have written a
sportive epigram on him, which is couched in the following
terms:—
You’re not the only man who has abstained
From living food, for so likewise have we;
And who, I’d like to know did ever taste
Food while alive, most sage Pythagoras?
When meat is boil’d, or roasted well and salted,
I don’t think it can well be called living.
Which, therefore, without scruple then we eat it,
And call it no more living flesh, but meat.
And another, which runs thus:—
Pythagoras was so wise a man, that he
Never eat meat himself, and called it sin.
And yet he gave good joints of beef to others.
So that I marvel at his principles;
Who others wronged, by teaching them to do
What he believed unholy for himself.
And another, as follows:—
Should you Pythagoras’ doctrine wish to know,
Look on the centre of Euphorbus’ shield.
For he asserts there lived a man of old,
And when he had no longer an existence,
He still could say that he had been alive,
Or else he would not still be living now.
And this one too:
Alas! alas! why did Pythagoras hold
Beans in such wondrous honour? Why, besides,
Did he thus die among his choice companions?
There was a field of beans; and so the sage,
Died in the common road of Agrigentum,
Rather than trample down his favourite beans.
XXIV. And he flourished about the sixtieth olympiad;
and his system lasted for nine or ten generations. And the
last of the Pythagoreans, whom Aristoxenus knew, were
Xenophilus, the Chalcidean, from Thrace; and Phanton, the
Phliasian, and Echecrates, and Diodes, and Polymnestus, who
were also Phliasians, and they were disciples of Philolaus
and Eurytus, of Tarentum.
XXV. And there were four men of the name of Pythagoras,
about the same time, at no great distance from one
another. One was a native of Crotona, a man who attained
tyrannical power; the second was a Phliasian, a trainer of
wrestlers, as some say; the third was a native of Zacynthus;
the fourth was this our philosopher, to whom they say the
mysteries of philosophy belong, in whose time that proverbial
phrase, “Ipse dixit,” was introduced into ordinary life. Some
also affirm, that there was another man of the name of
Pythagoras, a statuary of Rhodes; who is believed to have
been the first discoverer of rhythm and proportion; and
another was a Samian statuary; and another an orator, of no
reputation; and another was a physician, who wrote a treatise
on Squills; and also some essays on Homer; and another
was a man, who wrote a history of the affairs of the Dorians,
as we are told by Dionysius.
But Eratosthenes says, as Phavorinus quotes him, in the
eighth book of his Universal History, that this philosopher,
of whom we are speaking, was the first man who ever practised
boxing in a scientific manner, in the forty-eighth olympiad,
having his hair long, and being clothed in a purple
robe; and that he was rejected from the competition among
boys, and being ridiculed for his application, he immediately
entered among the men, and came off victorious. And this
statement is confirmed among other things, by the epigram
which Theætetus composed:—
Stranger, if e’er you knew Pythagoras,
Pythagoras, the man with flowing hair,
The celebrated boxer, erst of Samos;
I am Pythagoras. And if you ask
A citizen of Elis of my deeds,
You’ll surely think he is relating fables.
Phavorinus says, that he employed definitions, on account
of the mathematical subjects to which he applied himself.
And that Socrates and those who were his pupils, did so still
more; and that they were subsequently followed in this by
Aristotle and the Stoics.
He too, was the first person, who ever gave the name of
κόσμος to the universe, and the first who called the earth
round; though Theophrastus attributes this to Parmenides,
and Zeno to Hesiod. They say too, that Cylon used to be a
constant adversary of his, as Antidicus was of Socrates. And
this epigram also used to be repeated, concerning Pythagoras
the athlete:—
Pythagoras of Samos, son of Crates,
Came while a child to the Olympic games,
Eager to battle for the prize in boxing.
XXVI. There is a letter of this philosopher extant, which
is couched in the following terms:—
PYTHAGORAS TO ANAXIMENES
“You too, my most excellent friend, if you were not
superior to Pythagoras, in birth and reputation, would have
migrated from Miletus and gone elsewhere. But now the
reputation of your father keeps you back, which perhaps
would have restrained me too, if I had been like Anaximenes.
But if you, who are the most eminent man, abandon the
cities, all their ornaments will be taken from them, and the
Median power will be more dangerous to them. Nor is it
always seasonable to be studying astronomy, but it is more
honourable to exhibit a regard for one’s country. And I myself
am not always occupied about speculations of my own
fancy, but I am busied also with the wars which the Italians
are waging against one another.”
But since we have now finished our account of Pythagoras,
we must also speak of the most eminent of the Pythagoreans.
After whom, we must mention those who are spoken of more
promiscuously in connection with no particular school; and
then we will connect the whole series of philosophers worth
speaking of, till we arrive at Epicurus, as we have already
promised.
Now Telauges and Theano we have mentioned; and we
must now speak of Empedocles, in the first place, for, according
to some accounts, he was a pupil of Pythagoras.
LIFE OF EMPEDOCLES
I. Empedocles, as Hippobotus relates, was the son of
Meton, the son of Empedocles, and a citizen of Agrigentum.
And Timæus, in the fifteenth book of his Histories, gives the
same account, adding that Empedocles, the grandfather of the
poet, was also a most eminent man. And Hermippus tells
the same story as Timæus; and in the same spirit Heraclides,
in his treatise on Diseases, relates that he was of an illustrious
family, since his father bred a fine stud of horses.
Erastothenes, in his List of the Conquerors at the Olympic
Games, says, that the father of Meton gained the victory in
the seventy-first olympiad, quoting Aristotle as his authority
for the assertion.
But Apollodorus, the grammarian, in his Chronicles, says
that he was the son of Meton; and Glaucus says that he
came to Thurii when the city was only just completed. And
then proceeding a little further, he adds:—
And some relate that he did flee from thence,
And came to Syracuse, and on their side
Did fight in horrid war against th’ Athenians;
But those men seem to me completely wrong—
For by this time he must have been deceased,
Or very old, which is not much believed;
For Aristotle, and Heraclides too,
Say that he died at sixty years of age.
But certainly the person who got the victory with a single
horse in the seventy-first olympiad was a namesake of this
man, and that it is which deceived Apollodorus as to the age
of this philosopher.
But Satyrus, in his Lives, asserts, that Empedocles was the
son of Exænetus, and that he also left a son who was named
Exænetus. And that in the same Olympiad, he himself
gained the victory with the single horse; and his son, in
wrestling, or, as Heraclides says in his Abridgment, in
running. But I have found in the Commentaries of Phavorinus,
that Empedocles sacrificed, and gave as a feast to the
spectators of the games, an ox made of honey and flour, and
that he had a brother named Callicratidas.
But Telauges, the son of Pythagoras, in his letters to
Philolaus, says that Empedocles was the son of Archinomus;
and that he was a citizen of Agrigentum, he himself asserts at
the beginning of his Purifications.
Friends, who the mighty citadel inhabit,
Which crowns the golden waves of Acragas.
And this is enough to say about his family.
II. Timæus, in his ninth book, relates that he was a pupil
of Pythagoras, saying that he was afterwards convicted of
having divulged his doctrines, in the same way as Plato was,
and therefore that he was forbidden from thenceforth to
attend his school. And they say that Pythagoras himself
mentions him when he says:—
And in that band there was a learned man
Of wondrous wisdom; one, who of all men
Had the profoundest wealth of intellect.
But some say that when the philosopher says this, he is
referring to Parmenides.
Neanthes relates, that till the time of Philolaus and Empedocles,
the Pythagoreans used to admit all persons indiscriminately
into their school; but when Empedocles made
their doctrines public by means of his poems, then they made
a law to admit no Epic poet. And they say that the same
thing happened to Plato; for that he too was excluded from
the school. But who was the teacher of the Pythagorean
school that Empedocles was a pupil of, they do not say; for,
as for the letter of Telauges, in which he is stated to have
been a pupil of Hippasus and Brontinus, that is not worthy
of belief. But Theophrastus says that he was an imitator
and a rival of Parmenides, in his poems, for that he too had
delivered his opinions on natural philosophy in epic verse.
Hermippus, however, says that he was an imitator, not of
Parmenides, but of Xenophanes with whom he lived; and
that he imitated his epic style, and that it was at a later
period that he fell in with the Pythagoreans. But Alcidamas,
in his Natural Philosophy, says, that Zeno and Empedocles
were pupils of Parmenides, about the same time; and that
they subsequently seceded from him; and that Zeno adopted
a philosophical system peculiar to himself; but that Empedocles
became a pupil of Anaxagoras and Pythagoras, and that
he imitated the pompous demeanour, and way of life, and
gestures of the one, and the system of Natural Philosophy of
the other.
III. And Aristotle, in his Sophist, says that Empedocles
was the first person who invented rhetoric, and Zeno the first
person who invented dialectics. And in his book on Poetry,
he says, that Empedocles was a man of Homeric genius, and
endowed with great power of language, and a great master of
metaphor, and a man who employed all the successful artifices
of poetry, and also that when he had written several poems,
and among them one on the passage of the Hellespont, by
Xerxes, and also the proœmium of a hymn to Apollo, his
daughter subsequently burnt them, or, as Hieronymus says,
his sister, burning the proœmium unintentionally, but the
Persian poem on purpose, because it was incomplete. And
speaking generally, he says that he wrote tragedies and
political treatises.
But Heraclides, the son of Sarapion, says that the tragedies
were the work of some other Empedocles; and Hieronymus
says that he had met with forty-three. Neanthes, too, affirms
that when he was a young man, he wrote tragedies, and that
he himself had subsequently met with them; and Satyrus, in
his Lives, states that he was a physician, and also a most
excellent orator. And accordingly, that Gorgias, of Leontini,
was his pupil, a man of the greatest eminence as a rhetorician,
and one who left behind him a treatise containing a complete
system of the art; and who, as we are told by Apollodorus,
in his Chronicles, lived to the age of a hundred and nine
years.
IV. Satyrus tells us that he used to say that he had been
present when Empedocles was practising magic; and that he
professes this science, and many others too in his poems when
he says:—
And all the drugs which can relieve disease,
Or soften the approach of age, shall be
Revealed to your inquiries; I do know them,
And I to you alone will them disclose.
You shall restrain the fierce unbridled winds,
Which, rushing o’er the earth, bow down the corn,
And crush the farmer’s hopes. And when you will,
You shall recall them back to sweep the land:
Then you shall learn to dry the rainy clouds,
And bid warm summer cheer the heart of men.
Again, at your behest, the drought shall yield
To wholesome show’rs: when you give the word
Hell shall restore its dead.
V. And Timæus, in his eighteenth book, says, that this
man was held in great esteem on many accounts; for that
once, when the etesian gales were blowing violently, so as to
injure the crops, he ordered some asses to be flayed, and some
bladders to be made of their hides, and these he placed on
the hills and high places to catch the wind. And so, when
the wind ceased, he was called wind-forbidder (κωλυσανέμας).
And Heraclides, in his treatise on Diseases, says that he
dictated to Pausanias the statement which he made about the
dead woman. Now Pausanias, as both Aristippus and Satyrus
agree, was much attached to him; and he dedicated to him
the works which he wrote on Natural Philosophy, in the
following terms:—
Hear, O Pausanias, son of wise Anchites.
He also wrote an epigram upon him:—
Gela, his native land, does boast the birth
Of wise Anchites’ son, that great physician,
So fitly named Pausanias, from his skill;
A genuine son of Æsculapius,
Who has stopped many men whom fell disease
Marked for its own, from treading those dark paths
Which lead to Proserpine’s infernal realms.
VI. The case of the dead woman above mentioned, Heraclides
says, was something of this sort; that he kept her corpse for
thirty days dead, and yet free from corruption; on which
account he has called himself a physician and a prophet,
taking it also from these verses:—
Friends who the mighty citadel inhabit,
Which crowns the golden waves of Acragas
Votaries of noble actions, Hail to ye;
I, an immortal God, no longer mortal,
Now live among you well revered by all,
As is my due, crowned with holy fillets
And rosy garlands. And whene’er I come
To wealthy cities, then from men and women
Due honours meets me; and crowds follow me,
Seeking the way which leads to gainful glory.
Some ask for oracles, and some entreat,
For remedies against all kinds of sickness.
VII. And he says that Agrigentum was a very large city,
since it had eight hundred thousand inhabitants; on which
account Empedocles, seeing the people immersed in luxury,
said, “The men of Agrigentum devote themselves wholly to
luxury as if they were to die to-morrow, but they furnish their
houses as if they were to live for ever.”
VIII. It is said that Cleomenes, the rhapsodist, sung this
very poem, called the Purifications, at Olympia; at least this
is the account given by Phavorinus, in his Commentaries.
IX. And Aristotle says, that he was a most liberal man,
and far removed from anything like a domineering spirit; since
he constantly refused the sovereign power when it was offered
to him, as Xanthus assures us in his account of him, showing
plainly that he preferred a simple style of living. And Timæus
tells the same story, giving at the same time the reason why
he was so very popular. For he says that when on one occasion,
he was invited to a banquet by one of the magistrates,
the wine was carried about, but the supper was not served up.
And as every one else kept silence, he, disapproving of what
he saw, bade the servants bring in the supper; but the person
who had invited him said that he was waiting for the secretary
of the council. And when he came he was appointed master
of the feast, at the instigation of the giver of it, and then he
gave a plain intimation of his tyrannical inclinations, for he
ordered all the guests to drink, and those who did not drink
were to have the wine poured over their heads. Empedocles
said nothing at the moment, but the next day he summoned
them before the court, and procured the execution of both the
entertainer and the master of the feast.
And this was the beginning of his political career. And at
another time, when Acron, the physician, asked of the council
a place where he might erect a monument to his father, on
account of his eminence as a physician, Empedocles came
forward and opposed any such grant, adducing many arguments
on the ground of equality, and also putting the following
question:—“And what elegy shall we inscribe upon it?
Shall we say:—
“Ἄκρον ἰητρὸν Ἄκρων’ Ἀκραγαντῖνον πατρὸς ἄκρου
κρύπτει κρημνὸς ἄκρος πατρίδος ἀκροτάτης.”
But some give the second line thus:—
Ἀκροτάτης κορυφῆς τύμβος ἄκρος κατέχει.
And others assert that it is the composition of Simonides.
But afterwards Empedocles abolished the assembly of a
thousand, and established a council in which the magistrates
were to hold office for three years, on such a footing that it
should consist not only of rich men, but of those who were
favourers of the interests of the people. Timæus, however,
in his first and second book (for he often mentions him), says
that he appeared to entertain opinions adverse to a republic.
And, as far as his poetry goes, any one may see that he was
arrogant and self-satisfied. Accordingly, he says:—
Hail to ye,
I, an immortal God, no longer mortal,
Now live among you:
And so on.
But when he went to the olympic games he was considered
a worthy object of general attention; so that there was no
mention made of any one else in comparison of Empedocles.
X. Afterwards, indeed, when Agrigentum was settled, the
descendants of his enemies opposed his return; on which
account he retired to Peloponnesus, where he died. And
Timon has not let even Empedocles escape, but satirises him
in this style, saying:—
And then Empedocles, the honeyed speaker
Of soft forensic speeches; he did take
As many offices as he was able,
Creating magistrates who wanted helpers.
But there are two accounts of the manner of his death.
XI. For Heraclides, relating the story about the dead woman,
how Empedocles got great glory from sending away a dead
woman restored to life, says that he celebrated a sacrifice in
the field of Pisianax, and that some of his friends were invited,
among whom was Pausanias. And then, after the banquet,
they lay down, some going a little way off, and some lying under
the trees close by in the field, and some wherever they
happened to choose. But Empedocles himself remained in
the place where he had been sitting. But when day broke,
and they arose, he alone was not found. And when he was
sought for, and the servants were examined and said that they
did not know, one of them said, that at midnight he had heard
a loud voice calling Empedocles; and that then he himself
rose up and saw a great light from heaven, but nothing else.
And as they were all amazed at what had taken place, Pausanias
descended and sent some people to look for him; but
afterwards he was commanded not to busy himself about the
matter, as he was informed that what had happened was deserving
of thankfulness, and that they behoved to sacrifice to
Empedocles as to one who had become a God.
Hermippus says also, that a woman of the name of Panthea,
a native of Agrigentum, who had been given over by the physicians,
was cured by him, and that it was on this account that
he celebrated a sacrifice; and that the guests invited were about
eighty in number. But Hippobotus says that he rose up and
went away as if he were going to mount Ætna; and that when
he arrived at the crater of fire he leaped in, and disappeared,
wishing to establish a belief that he had become a God. But
afterwards the truth was detected by one of his slippers having
been dropped. For he used to wear slippers with brazen soles.
Pausanias, however, contradicts this statement.
But Diodorus, of Ephesus, writing about Anaximander, says
that Empedocles imitated him; indulging in a tragic sort of
pride, and wearing magnificent apparel. And when a pestilence
attacked the people of Selinus, by reason of the bad smells
arising from the adjacent river, so that the men died and the
women bore dead children, Empedocles contrived a plan, and
brought into the same channel two other rivers at his own
expense; and so, by mixing their waters with that of the other
river, he sweetened the stream. And as the pestilence was
removed in this way, when the people of Selinus were on one
occasion holding a festival on the bank of the river, Empedocles
appeared among them; and they rising up, offered him
adoration, and prayed to him as to a God. And he, wishing
to confirm this idea which they had adopted of him, leaped
into the fire.
But Timæus contradicts all these stories; saying expressly,
that he departed into Peloponnesus, and never returned at
all, on which account the manner of his death is uncertain.
And he especially denies the tale of Heraclides in his fourth
book; for he says that Pisianax was a Syracusan, and had no
field in the district of Agrigentum; but that Pausanias erected
a monument in honour of his friend, since such a report had
got about concerning him; and, as he was a rich man, made it
a statue and little chapel, as one might erect to a God. “How
then,” adds Timæus, “could he have leaped into a crater, of
which, though they were in the neighbourhood, he had never
made any mention? He died then in Peloponnesus; and
there is nothing extraordinary in there being no tomb of his
to be seen; for there are many other men who have no tomb
visible.” These are the words of Timæus; and he adds
further, “But Heraclides is altogether a man fond of strange
stories, and one who would assert that a man had fallen from
the moon.”
Hippobotus says, that there was a clothed statue of Empedocles
which lay formerly in Agrigentum, but which was
afterwards placed in front of the Senate House of the Romans
divested of its clothing, as the Romans had carried it off and
erected it there. And there are traces of some inscriptions
or reliefs still discernible on it.
Neanthes of Cyzicus, who also wrote about the Pythagoreans,
says, that when Meton was dead, the seeds of tyrannical
power began to appear; and that then Empedocles persuaded
the Agrigentines to desist from their factious disputes, and to
establish political equality. And besides, as there were many
of the female citizens destitute of dowry, he portioned them
out of his own private fortune. And relying on these actions
of his, he assumed a purple robe and wore a golden circlet on
his hand, as Phavorinus relates in the first book of his Commentaries.
He also wore slippers with brazen soles, and a
Delphian garland. His hair was let grow very long, and he
had boys to follow him; and he himself always preserved a
solemn countenance, and a uniformly grave deportment. And
he marched about in such style, that he seemed to all the
citizens, who met him and who admired his deportment, to
exhibit a sort of likeness to kingly power. And afterwards, it
happened that as on the occasion of some festival he was going
in a chariot to Messene, he was upset and broke his thigh;
and he was taken ill in consequence, and so died, at the age
of seventy-seven. And his tomb is in Megara.
But as to his age, Aristotle differs from this account of
Neanthes; for he asserts that he died at sixty years of age;
others again say, that he was a hundred and nine when he
died. He flourished about the eighty-fourth olympiad. Demetrius,
of Trœzen, in his book against the Sophists, reports that,
as the lines of Homer say:—
He now, self-murdered, from a beam depends,
And his mad soul to blackest hell descends.
But in the letter of Telauges, which has been mentioned before,
it is said that he slipped down through old age, and fell into
the sea, and so died.
And this is enough to say about his death.
There is also a jesting epigram of ours upon him, in our
collection of Poems in all Metres, which runs thus:—
You too, Empedocles, essayed to purge
Your body in the rapid flames, and drank
The liquid fire from the restless crater;
I say not that you threw yourself at once
Into the stream of Ætna’s fiery flood.
But seeking to conceal yourself you fell,
And so you met with unintended death.
And another:—
’Tis said the wise Empedocles did fall
Out of his chariot, and so broke his thigh:
But if he leapt into the flames of Ætna,
How could his tomb be shown in Megara?
XII. The following were some of his doctrines. He used
to assert that there were four elements, fire, water, earth, and
air. And that that is friendship by which they are united,
and discord by which they are separated. And he speaks thus
on this subject:—
Bright Jove, life-giving Juno, Pluto dark,
And Nestis, who fills mortal eyes with tears.
Meaning by Jove fire, by Juno the earth, by Pluto the air,
and by Nestis water. And these things, says he, never cease
alternating with one another; inasmuch as this arrangement is
perpetual. Accordingly, he says subsequently:—
Sometimes in friendship bound they coalesce,
Sometimes they’re parted by fell discord’s hate.
And he asserts that the sun is a vast assemblage of fire, and
that it is larger than the moon. And the moon is disk-shaped;
and that the heaven itself is like crystal; and that the soul
inhabits every kind of form of animals and plants. Accordingly,
he thus expresses himself.
For once I was a boy, and once a girl.
A bush, a bird, a fish who swims the sea,
XIII. His writings on Natural Philosophy and his Purifications
extend to five thousand verses; and his Medical
Poem to six hundred; and his Tragedies we have spoken of
previously.
LIFE OF EPICHARMUS
I. Epicharmus was a native of Cos, the son of Helothales;
he also was a pupil of Pythagoras. When he was three months
old he was brought to Megara, in Sicily, and from thence he
came to Syracuse, as he himself tells us in his writings. And
on his statue there is the following inscription.
As the bright sun excels the other stars,
As the sea far exceeds the river streams:
So does sage Epicharmus men surpass,
Whom hospitable Syracuse has crowned.
II. He has left behind him Commentaries in which he
treats of natural philosophy, and delivers apophthegms, and
discusses medicine. He has also added brief notes to many
of his commentaries, in which he declares plainly that he is
the author of the works.
III. He died at the age of ninety years.
LIFE OF ARCHYTAS
I. Archytas was a native of Tarentum, and the son of
Mnesagoras; or, as Aristoxenus relates, of Histiæus.
II. He also was a Pythagorean; and he it was who saved
Plato’s life by means of a letter, when he was in danger of
being put to death by Dionysius.
III. He was a man held in very general esteem on account
of his universal virtue; and he was seven times appointed
general of his countrymen, when no one else had ever held
the office for more than one year, as the law forbade it to be
held for a longer period.
IV. Plato wrote his letters to him; as he had begun the
correspondence by writing himself to Plato, which he did in
the following manner:—
ARCHYTAS TO PLATO, GREETING
“I am very glad that you have recovered from your delicate
state of health; for you yourself have sent me word of your
recovery, and Lamiscus gives the same account. I have been
much occupied with some commentaries, and have been among
the Lucanians, and have met with the descendants of Ocellus.
I have now in my possession, and I send to you the treatises
on Law, and Kingly Power, and Piety, and the Creation of
the Universe. As for the rest, I have not been able to find
them, but whenever I do find any, I will send them to you.”
Thus wrote Archytas. And Plato sent him an answer in
the following terms:—
PLATO TO ARCHYTAS, GREETING
“I was exceedingly glad to receive the Commentaries which
came from you, and I have admired their author in the greatest
possible degree; and he seems to us to be a man worthy of his
ancient ancestors. For they are said to have been originally
natives of Myra; and to have been among the Trojans, whom
Laomedon took with him, gallant men, as the story handed
down by tradition attests. As for my Commentaries which
you ask me for, they are not yet completed, but such as they
are I send them to you. And on the propriety of taking care
of such things we are both agreed, so that I have no need to
impress anything on you on that head. Farewell.”
These then are the letters which these philosophers wrote
to one another.
V. There were four people of the name of Archytas. The
first, this man of whom we are speaking. The second was a
Mytilenean, a musician. The third wrote a treatise on Agriculture.
The fourth was an epigrammatic poet. Some writers
also make mention of a fifth, who was an architect; and there
is a book on mechanics extant which is attributed to him;
which begins in this way:—
“This is what I heard from Teucer, the Carthaginian.”
And concerning the musician, the following story is told:
That once he was reproached for not making himself heard,
and he replied, “My organ contends on my behalf, and
speaks.”
VI. Aristoxenus says, that this Pythagorean was never
once defeated while acting as general. But that as he was
attacked by envy, he once gave up his command, and his army
was immediately taken prisoner.
VII. He was the first person who applied mathematical
principles to mechanics, and reduced them to a system; and
the first also who gave a methodical impulse to descriptive
geometry in seeking, in the sections of a demicylinder for a
proportional mean, which should enable him to find the double
of a given cube. He was also the first person who ever gave
the geometrical measure of a cube, as Plato mentions in his
Republic.
LIFE OF ALCMÆON.
I. Alcmæon was a citizen of Crotona; he also was a pupil
of Pythagoras. And the chief part of his writings are on
medical subjects; but he also at times discusses points of
natural philosophy, and asserts that the greater part of human
affairs have two sides. He appears to have been the first
person who wrote a treatise on Natural Philosophy, as Phavorinus
affirms, in his Universal History; and he used to argue
that the moon had the same nature for ever which she had at
that moment.
II. He was the son of Pirithus, as he himself states at the
beginning of his treatise, where he says, “Alcmæon, of Crotona,
the son of Pirithus, says this to Brontinus, and Leon,
and Bathyllus. About things invisible, and things mortal,
the Gods alone have a certain knowledge; but men may form
conjectures.…” And so on.
He used also to say that the soul was immortal, and that
it was in a state of perpetual motion in the same way as the
sun.
LIFE OF HIPPASUS
I. Hippasus was a citizen of Metapontum, and a pupil of
Pythagoras.
II. He used to say that the time of the changes of the
world was definite, and that the universe also was finite, and
in a state of perpetual motion.
III. Demetrius, in his treatise on People of the same Name,
says that he left no writings behind him.
IV. There were two people of the name of Hippasus; this
man, and another who wrote an account of the Constitution of
the Lacedæmonians, in five books. And he was himself a
Lacedæmonian.
LIFE OF PHILOLAUS
I. Philolaus was a native of Crotona, and a pupil of
Pythagoras, it was from him that Plato wrote to Dion to take
care and purchase the books of Pythagoras.
II. And he died under suspicion of having designed to
seize on the tyranny; and we have written an epigram on
him:—
I say that all men ought above all things
To guard against suspicion. For, though innocent,
Still if you are suspected, you’re unfortunate.
And thus his native city of Crotona
Slew Philolaus; for the jealous citizens
Thought that his house betrayed a tyrant’s purpose.
III. His theory was, that everything was produced by
harmony and necessity. And he was the first person who
affirmed that the earth moved in a circle; though some
attribute the assertion of this principle to Icetas of Syracuse.
IV. He wrote one book, which Hermippus reports, on the
authority of some unknown writer, that Plato the philosopher
purchased when he was in Sicily (having come thither to the
court of Dionysius), of the relations of Philolaus, for forty
Alexandrian minæ of silver; and that from this book he
copied his Timæus. But others say that Plato received it as a
present, after having obtained his liberty for a young man,
one of the disciples of Philolaus, who had been arrested
by Dionysius. Demetrius, in his treatise on people of the
same name, says that he was the first of the Pythagoreans
who wrote a treatise on Natural Philosophy; and it begins
thus:—
“But nature in the world has been composed of bodies
infinite and finite, and so is the whole world and all that is
in it.”
LIFE OF EUDOXUS
I. Eudoxus was the son of Æschines, and a native of
Cnidus. He was an astronomer, a geometrician, a physician,
and a lawgiver. In geometry he was a pupil of Archytas,
and in medicine of Philistion, the Sicilian, as Callimachus
relates in his Tablets; and Sotion, in his Successions, asserts
that he was likewise a pupil of Plato; for that, when he was
twenty-three years of age, and in very narrow circumstances,
he came to Athens with Theomedon the physician, by whom
he was chiefly supported, being attracted by the reputation of
the Socratic school. Some say that his attachment to Theomedon
was cemented by nearer ties. And when he had arrived
at Piræus, he went up to the city every day, and when he had
heard the Sophists lecture he returned. And having spent two
months there, he returned home again; and being again aided
by the contributions of his friends, he set sail for Egypt, with
Chrysippus the physician, bearing letters of introduction from
Agesilaus to Nectanabis, and that he recommended him to the
priests.
II. And having remained there a year and four months,
he shaved his eyebrows after the manner of the Egyptian
priests, and composed, as it is said, the treatise called the
Octaeteris. From thence he went to Cyzicus, and to the
Propontis, in both of which places he lived as a Sophist;
he also went to the court of Mausolus. And then, in this
manner, he returned again to Athens, having a great many
disciples with him, for the sake, as some say, of annoying
Plato, because he had originally discarded him from his
school. Some say, that when Plato gave an entertainment on
one occasion, Eudoxus, as the guests were very numerous,
introduced the fashion of sitting in a semicircle.
Nicomachus, the son of Aristotle, affirms that he used to
say, that pleasure was the good.
III. He was received in his own country with great
honours, as the decree that was passed respecting him shows.
He was also accounted very illustrious among the Greeks,
having given laws to his own fellow citizens, as Hermippus
tells us in the fourth book of his account of the Seven Wise
Men; and having also written treatises on Astronomy and
Geometry, and several other considerable works.
He had three daughters, Actis, Philtis, and Delphis. And
Eratosthenes asserts, in his books addressed to Baton, that he
also composed dialogues entitled Dialogues of Dogs; others
say that these were written by some Egyptians, in their own
language, and that Eudoxus translated them, and published
them in Greece. One of his pupils was Chrysippus, of
Cnidos, son of Erineus, who learnt of him all that he knew
about the Gods, and the world, and the heavenly bodies;
and who learnt medicine from Philistion the Sicilian. He
also left some very admirable Reminiscences.
IV. He had a son of the name of Aristagoras, who was the
teacher of Chrysippus, the son of Aëthlius; he was the author
of a work on Remedies for the Eyes, as speculations on
natural philosophy had come very much under his notice.
V. There were three people of the name of Eudoxus. The
first, this man of whom we are speaking; the second, a
Rhodian, who wrote histories; the third, a Siciliot, a son of
Agathocles, a comic poet, who gained three victories at the
Dionysia in the city, and five at the Lenæa, as Apollodorus
tells us in his Chronicles. We also find another, who was a physician
of Cnidos, who is mentioned by this Eudoxus, in his
Circuit of the World, where he says that he used to warn people
to keep constantly exercising their limbs in every kind of
exercise, and their senses too.
VI. The same author says, that the Cnidean Eudoxus
flourished about the hundred and third olympiad; and that he
was the inventor of the theory of crooked lines. And he died in
his fifty-third year. But when he was in Egypt with Conuphis,
of Heliopolis, Apis licked his garment; and so the
priests said that he would be short-lived, but very illustrious,
as it is reported by Phavorinus in his Commentaries. And
we have written an epigram on him, that runs thus:—
’Tis said, that while at Memphis wise Eudoxus
Learnt his own fate from th’ holy fair-horned bull;
He said indeed no word, bulls do not speak
Nor had kind nature e’er calf Apis gifted
With an articulately speaking mouth.
But standing on one side he lick’d his cloak,
Showing by this most plainly—in brief time
You shall put off your life. So death came soon,
When he had just seen three and fifty times
The Pleiads rise to warn the mariners.
And instead of Eudoxus, they used to call him Endoxus,
on account of the brilliancy of his reputation. And since we
have gone through the illustrious Pythagoreans, we must now
speak of the Promiscuous philosophers, as they call them.
And we will first of all speak of Heraclitus.
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