04427nam 2200709 450 991082098750332120230803031946.03-11-031850-410.1515/9783110318500(CKB)2670000000494816(EBL)1184382(OCoLC)862746443(SSID)ssj0001041172(PQKBManifestationID)11577155(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001041172(PQKBWorkID)11009666(PQKB)11105533(MiAaPQ)EBC1184382(DE-B1597)210334(OCoLC)881296360(DE-B1597)9783110318500(Au-PeEL)EBL1184382(CaPaEBR)ebr10811333(CaONFJC)MIL808150(EXLCZ)99267000000049481620131031h20132013 uy 0engurnn#---|u||utxtccrOn Pythagoreanism /edited by Gabriele Cornelli, Richard McKirahan and Constantinos MacrisBerlin ;Boston :De Gruyter Mouton,[2013]©20131 online resource (552 p.)Studia praesocratica ;Band 5Papers from a conference held in 2011 in Brazil.3-11-031845-8 Includes bibliographical references and indexes.Front matter --Contents --Introduction --Pythagoreanism as an historiographical category: historical and methodological notes --Approaching Pythagoras of Samos: Ritual, Natural Philosophy and Politics --When Pythagoras was still Living in Samos (Heraclitus, frg. 129) --The Pythagorean Akousmata and Early Pythagoreanism --Pythagoras Homericus: Performance as Hermeneutic Horizon to Interpret Pythagorean Tradition --Orphics and Pythagoreans: the Greek perspective --On the origin of the Orphic-Pythagorean notion of the immortality of the soul --Philolaus on Number --Archytas and the duplication of the cube --Plato and the Pythagoreans --Philolaus and Plato on method, measure and pleasure --Epicharmus and the plagiarism of Plato --Pythagorean Number Doctrine in the Academy --Early Pythagoreans in Aristotle’s account --The Pythagorean Hypomnemata reported by Alexander Polyhistor in Diogenes Laertius (8.25–33): a proposal for reading --Eudorus of Alexandria and the ‘Pythagorean’ pseudepigrapha --Pythagoreanism in late antique Philosophy, after Proclus --Ficino’s Pythagoras --A modern approximation to Pythagoreanism: Boscovich’s “point atomism” --Curricula --Index of Topics --Index locorum --Index nominumThe purpose of the conference “On Pythagoreanism”, held in Brasilia in 2011, was to bring together leading scholars from all over the world to define the status quaestionis for the ever-increasing interest and research on Pythagoreanism in the 21st century. The papers included in this volume exemplify the variety of topics and approaches now being used to understand the polyhedral image of one of the most fascinating and long-lasting intellectual phenomena in Western history. Cornelli’s paper opens the volume by charting the course of Pythagorean studies over the past two centuries. The remaining contributions range chronologically from Pythagoras and the early Pythagoreans of the archaic period (6th-5th centuries BCE) through the classical, hellenistic and late antique periods, to the eighteenth century. Thematically they treat the connections of Pythagoreanism with Orphism and religion, with mathematics, metaphysics and epistemology and with politics and the Pythagorean way of life.Studia praesocratica ;Bd. 5.Philosophy, AncientCongressesPythagoras and Pythagorean schoolCongressesPythagorean theoremCongressesPresocratics.Pythagoras.Pythagoreanism.Philosophy, AncientPythagoras and Pythagorean schoolPythagorean theorem182/.2Cornelli Gabriele327273Macris Constantinos1196679McKirahan Richard D186661MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910820987503321On Pythagoreanism4050975UNINA