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Pythagoras of Samos
Born: about 569 BC in Samos, Ionia
Died: about 475 BC
Pythagoras of Samos is often described as the first pure
mathematician. He is an extremely important figure in the development
of mathematics yet we know relatively little about his mathematical
achievements. Unlike many later Greek mathematicians, where at least
we have some of the books which they wrote, we have nothing of
Pythagoras's writings. The society which he led, half religious and
half scientific, followed a code of secrecy which certainly means
that today Pythagoras is a mysterious figure.
We do have details of Pythagoras's life from early biographies which
use important original sources yet are written by authors who
attribute divine powers to him, and whose aim was to present him as a
god-like figure. What we present below is an attempt to collect
together the most reliable sources to reconstruct an account of
Pythagoras's life. There is fairly good agreement on the main events
of his life but most of the dates are disputed with different
scholars giving dates which differ by 20 years. Some historians treat
all this information as merely legends but, even if the reader treats
it in this way, being such an early record it is of historical
importance.
Pythagoras's father was Mnesarchus ([12] and [13]), while his mother
was Pythais [8] and she was a native of Samos. Mnesarchus was a
merchant who came from Tyre, and there is a story ([12] and [13])
that he brought corn to Samos at a time of famine and was granted
citizenship of Samos as a mark of gratitude. As a child Pythagoras
spent his early years in Samos but travelled widely with his father.
There are accounts of Mnesarchus returning to Tyre with Pythagoras
and that he was taught there by the Chaldaeans and the learned men of
Syria. It seems that he also visited Italy with his father.
Little is known of Pythagoras's childhood. All accounts of his
physical appearance are likely to be fictitious except the
description of a striking birthmark which Pythagoras had on his
thigh. It is probable that he had two brothers although some sources
say that he had three. Certainly he was well educated, learning to
play the lyre, learning poetry and to recite Homer. There were, among
his teachers, three philosophers who were to influence Pythagoras
while he was a young man. One of the most important was Pherekydes
who many describe as the teacher of Pythagoras.
The other two philosophers who were to influence Pythagoras, and to
introduce him to mathematical ideas, were Thales and his pupil
Anaximander who both lived on Miletus. In [8] it is said that
Pythagoras visited Thales in Miletus when he was between 18 and 20
years old. By this time Thales was an old man and, although he
created a strong impression on Pythagoras, he probably did not teach
him a great deal. However he did contribute to Pythagoras's interest
in mathematics and astronomy, and advised him to travel to Egypt to
learn more of these subjects. Thales's pupil, Anaximander, lectured
on Miletus and Pythagoras attended these lectures. Anaximander
certainly was interested in geometry and cosmology and many of his
ideas would influence Pythagoras's own views.
In about 535 BC Pythagoras went to Egypt. This happened a few years
after the tyrant Polycrates seized control of the city of Samos.
There is some evidence to suggest that Pythagoras and Polycrates were
friendly at first and it is claimed [5] that Pythagoras went to Egypt
with a letter of introduction written by Polycrates. In fact
Polycrates had an alliance with Egypt and there were therefore strong
links between Samos and Egypt at this time. The accounts of
Pythagoras's time in Egypt suggest that he visited many of the
temples and took part in many discussions with the priests. According
to Porphyry ([12] and [13]) Pythagoras was refused admission to all
the temples except the one at Diospolis where he was accepted into
the priesthood after completing the rites necessary for admission.
It is not difficult to relate many of Pythagoras's beliefs, ones he
would later impose on the society that he set up in Italy, to the
customs that he came across in Egypt. For example the secrecy of the
Egyptian priests, their refusal to eat beans, their refusal to wear
even cloths made from animal skins, and their striving for purity
were all customs that Pythagoras would later adopt. Porphyry in [12]
and [13] says that Pythagoras learnt geometry from the Egyptians but
it is likely that he was already acquainted with geometry, certainly
after teachings from Thales and Anaximander.
In 525 BC Cambyses II, the king of Persia, invaded Egypt. Polycrates
abandoned his alliance with Egypt and sent 40 ships to join the
Persian fleet against the Egyptians. After Cambyses had won the
Battle of Pelusium in the Nile Delta and had captured Heliopolis and
Memphis, Egyptian resistance collapsed. Pythagoras was taken prisoner
and taken to Babylon. Iamblichus writes that Pythagoras (see [8]):-
... was transported by the followers of Cambyses as a prisoner of
war. Whilst he was there he gladly associated with the Magoi ... and
was instructed in their sacred rites and learnt about a very mystical
worship of the gods. He also reached the acme of perfection in
arithmetic and music and the other mathematical sciences taught by
the Babylonians...
In about 520 BC Pythagoras left Babylon and returned to Samos.
Polycrates had been killed in about 522 BC and Cambyses died in the
summer of 522 BC, either by committing suicide or as the result of an
accident. The deaths of these rulers may have been a factor in
Pythagoras's return to Samos but it is nowhere explained how
Pythagoras obtained his freedom. Darius of Persia had taken control
of Samos after Polycrates' death and he would have controlled the
island on Pythagoras's return. This conflicts with the accounts of
Porphyry and Diogenes Laertius who state that Polycrates was still in
control of Samos when Pythagoras returned there.
Pythagoras made a journey to Crete shortly after his return to Samos
to study the system of laws there. Back in Samos he founded a school
which was called the semicircle. Iamblichus [8] writes in the third
century AD that:-
... he formed a school in the city [of Samos], the 'semicircle' of
Pythagoras, which is known by that name even today, in which the
Samians hold political meetings. They do this because they think one
should discuss questions about goodness, justice and expediency in
this place which was founded by the man who made all these subjects
his business. Outside the city he made a cave the private site of his
own philosophical teaching, spending most of the night and daytime
there and doing research into the uses of mathematics...
Pythagoras left Samos and went to southern Italy in about 518 BC
(some say much earlier). Iamblichus [8] gives some reasons for him
leaving. First he comments on the Samian response to his teaching
methods:-
... he tried to use his symbolic method of teaching which was similar
in all respects to the lessons he had learnt in Egypt. The Samians
were not very keen on this method and treated him in a rude and
improper manner.
This was, according to Iamblichus, used in part as an excuse for
Pythagoras to leave Samos:-
... Pythagoras was dragged into all sorts of diplomatic missions by
his fellow citizens and forced to participate in public affairs. ...
He knew that all the philosophers before him had ended their days on
foreign soil so he decided to escape all political responsibility,
alleging as his excuse, according to some sources, the contempt the
Samians had for his teaching method.
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 [2]:-
(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) that all brothers of the order should observe 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. First we should be clear in what sense Pythagoras and
the mathematikoi were studying mathematics. They were not acting as a
mathematics research group does in a modern university or other
institution. There were no 'open problems' for them to solve, and
they were not in any sense interested in trying to formulate or solve
mathematical problems.
Rather Pythagoras was interested in the principles of mathematics,
the concept of number, the concept of a triangle or other
mathematical figure and the abstract idea of a proof. As Brumbaugh
writes in [3]:-
It is hard for us today, familiar as we are with pure mathematical
abstraction and with the mental act of generalisation, to appreciate
the originality of this Pythagorean contribution.
In fact today we have become so mathematically sophisticated that we
fail even to recognise 2 as an abstract quantity. There is a
remarkable step from 2 ships + 2 ships = 4 ships, to the abstract
result 2 + 2 = 4, which applies not only to ships but to pens,
people, houses etc. There is another step to see that the abstract
notion of 2 is itself a thing, in some sense every bit as real as a
ship or a house.
Pythagoras believed that all relations could be reduced to number
relations. As Aristotle wrote:-
The Pythagorean ... having been brought up in the study of
mathematics, thought that things are numbers ... and that the whole
cosmos is a scale and a number.
This generalisation stemmed from Pythagoras's observations in music,
mathematics and astronomy. Pythagoras noticed that vibrating strings
produce harmonious tones when the ratios of the lengths of the
strings are whole numbers, and that these ratios could be extended to
other instruments. In fact Pythagoras made remarkable contributions
to the mathematical theory of music. He was a fine musician, playing
the lyre, and he used music as a means to help those who were ill.
Pythagoras studied properties of numbers which would be familiar to
mathematicians today, such as even and odd numbers, triangular
numbers, perfect numbers etc. However to Pythagoras numbers had
personalities which we hardly recognise as mathematics today [3]:-
Each number had its own personality - masculine or feminine, perfect
or incomplete, beautiful or ugly. This feeling modern mathematics has
deliberately eliminated, but we still find overtones of it in fiction
and poetry. Ten was the very best number: it contained in itself the
first four integers - one, two, three, and four [1 + 2 + 3 + 4 = 10]
- and these written in dot notation formed a perfect triangle.
Of course today we particularly remember Pythagoras for his famous
geometry theorem. Although the theorem, now known as Pythagoras's
theorem, was known to the Babylonians 1000 years earlier he may have
been the first to prove it. Proclus, the last major Greek
philosopher, who lived around 450 AD wrote (see [7]):-
After [Thales, etc.] Pythagoras transformed the study of geometry
into a liberal education, examining the principles of the science
from the beginning and probing the theorems in an immaterial and
intellectual manner: he it was who discovered the theory of
irrational and the construction of the cosmic figures.
Again Proclus, writing of geometry, said:-
I emulate the Pythagoreans who even had a conventional phrase to
express what I mean "a figure and a platform, not a figure and a
sixpence", by which they implied that the geometry which is deserving
of study is that which, at each new theorem, sets up a platform to
ascend by, and lifts the soul on high instead of allowing it to go
down among the sensible objects and so become subservient to the
common needs of this mortal life.
Heath [7] gives a list of theorems attributed to Pythagoras, or
rather more generally to the Pythagoreans.
(i) The sum of the angles of a triangle is equal to two right angles.
Also the Pythagoreans knew the generalisation which states that a
polygon with n sides has sum of interior angles 2n - 4 right angles
and sum of exterior angles equal to four right angles.
(ii) The theorem of Pythagoras - for a right angled triangle the
square on the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares on the
other two sides. We should note here that to Pythagoras the square on
the hypotenuse would certainly not be thought of as a number
multiplied by itself, but rather as a geometrical square constructed
on the side. To say that the sum of two squares is equal to a third
square meant that the two squares could be cut up and reassembled to
form a square identical to the third square.
(iii) Constructing figures of a given area and geometrical algebra.
For example they solved equations such as a (a - x) = x2 by
geometrical means.
(iv) The discovery of irrationals. This is certainly attributed to
the Pythagoreans but it does seem unlikely to have been due to
Pythagoras himself. This went against Pythagoras's philosophy the all
things are numbers, since by a number he meant the ratio of two whole
numbers. However, because of his belief that all things are numbers
it would be a natural task to try to prove that the hypotenuse of an
isosceles right angled triangle had a length corresponding to a
number.
(v) The five regular solids. It is thought that Pythagoras himself
knew how to construct the first three but it is unlikely that he
would have known how to construct the other two.
(vi) In astronomy Pythagoras taught that the Earth was a sphere at
the centre of the Universe. He also recognised that the orbit of the
Moon was inclined to the equator of the Earth and he was one of the
first to realise that Venus as an evening star was the same planet as
Venus as a morning star.
Primarily, however, Pythagoras was a philosopher. In addition to his
beliefs about numbers, geometry and astronomy described above, he
held [2]:-
... the following philosophical and ethical teachings: ... the
dependence of the dynamics of world structure on the interaction of
contraries, or pairs of opposites; the viewing of the soul as a
self-moving number experiencing a form of metempsychosis, or
successive reincarnation in different species until its eventual
purification (particularly through the intellectual life of the
ethically rigorous Pythagoreans); and the understanding ...that all
existing objects were fundamentally composed of form and not of
material substance. Further Pythagorean doctrine ... identified the
brain as the locus of the soul; and prescribed certain secret cultic
practices.
In [3] their practical ethics are also described:-
In their ethical practices, the Pythagorean were famous for their
mutual friendship, unselfishness, and honesty.
Pythagoras's Society at Croton was not unaffected by political events
despite his desire to stay out of politics. Pythagoras went to Delos
in 513 BC to nurse his old teacher Pherekydes who was dying. He
remained there for a few months until the death of his friend and
teacher and then returned to Croton. In 510 BC Croton attacked and
defeated its neighbour Sybaris and there is certainly some
suggestions that Pythagoras became involved in the dispute. Then in
around 508 BC the Pythagorean Society at Croton was attacked by Cylon,
a noble from Croton itself. Pythagoras escaped to Metapontium and the
most authors say he died there, some claiming that he committed
suicide because of the attack on his Society. Iamblichus in [8]
quotes one version of events:-
Cylon, a Crotoniate and leading citizen by birth, fame and riches,
but otherwise a difficult, violent, disturbing and tyrannically
disposed man, eagerly desired to participate in the Pythagorean way
of life. He approached Pythagoras, then an old man, but was rejected
because of the character defects just described. When this happened
Cylon and his friends vowed to make a strong attack on Pythagoras and
his followers. Thus a powerfully aggressive zeal activated Cylon and
his followers to persecute the Pythagoreans to the very last man.
Because of this Pythagoras left for Metapontium and there is said to
have ended his days.
This seems accepted by most but Iamblichus himself does not accept
this version and argues that the attack by Cylon was a minor affair
and that Pythagoras returned to Croton. Certainly the Pythagorean
Society thrived for many years after this and spread from Croton to
many other Italian cities. Gorman [6] argues that this is a strong
reason to believe that Pythagoras returned to Croton and quotes other
evidence such as the widely reported age of Pythagoras as around 100
at the time of his death and the fact that many sources say that
Pythagoras taught Empedokles to claim that he must have lived well
after 480 BC.
The evidence is unclear as to when and where the death of Pythagoras
occurred. Certainly the Pythagorean Society expanded rapidly after
500 BC, became political in nature and also spilt into a number of
factions. In 460 BC the Society [2]:-
... was violently suppressed. Its meeting houses were everywhere
sacked and burned; mention is made in particular of "the house of
Milo" in Croton, where 50 or 60 Pythagoreans were surprised and
slain. Those who survived took refuge at Thebes and other places.
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