Was Plato a Pythagorean? Plato's students and
earliest critics thought so, but scholars since the 19th
century have been more skeptical. In Plato and
Pythagoreanism, Phillip Sidney Horky argues that a
specific type of Pythagorean philosophy, called
"mathematical" Pythagoreanism, exercised a decisive
influence on fundamental aspects of Plato's philosophy.
The progenitor of mathematical Pythagoreanism was the
infamous Pythagorean heretic and political revolutionary
Hippasus of Metapontum, a student of Pythagoras who is
credited with experiments in harmonics that led to
innovations in mathematics. The innovations of Hippasus
and other mathematical Pythagoreans, including
Empedocles of Agrigentum, Epicharmus of Syracuse,
Philolaus of Croton, and Archytas of Tarentum, presented
philosophers like Plato with new approaches to science
that sought to reconcile empirical knowledge with
abstract mathematical theories. Plato and Pythagoreanism
shows how mathematical Pythagoreanism established many
of the fundamental philosophical questions Plato dealt
with in his central dialogues, including Cratylus,
Phaedo, Republic, Timaeus, and Philebus. In the process,
it also illuminates the historical significance of the
mathematical Pythagoreans, a group whose influence over
the development of philosophical and scientific methods
have been obscured since late antiquity. The picture
that results is one in which Plato inherits mathematical
Pythagorean method only to transform it into a powerful
philosophical argument concerning the essential
relationships between the cosmos and the human
being.
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