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Pythagoras - Scientific contributions |  | Pythagoras - Scientific contributions: Encyclopedia II - Pythagoras - Scientific contributions |  | Some consider Pythagoras the pupil of Anaximander and some ancient sources tell of his visiting, in his twenties, the philosopher Thales, just before the death of the latter. No account exists of the specifics of the meeting, other than the report that Thales recommended that Pythagoras travel to Egypt in order to further his philosophical and mathematical training.
In astronomy, the Pythagoreans were well aware of the periodic numerical relations of the planets, moon, and sun. The celestial spheres of the planets were thought to prod ...
See also:Pythagoras, Pythagoras - Biography, Pythagoras - Pythagoreans, Pythagoras - Literary works, Pythagoras - Scientific contributions |  | | Pythagoras, Pythagoras - Biography, Pythagoras - Literary works, Pythagoras - Pythagoreans, Pythagoras - Scientific contributions, Hippasus, Pythagoreans, Pythagoreanism, Pythagorean comma, Pythagorean theorem, Sacred geometry |  | |
|  |  | Pythagoras: Encyclopedia II - Pythagoras - Scientific contributions
Pythagoras - Scientific contributions
Some consider Pythagoras the pupil of Anaximander and some ancient sources tell of his visiting, in his twenties, the philosopher Thales, just before the death of the latter. No account exists of the specifics of the meeting, other than the report that Thales recommended that Pythagoras travel to Egypt in order to further his philosophical and mathematical training.
In astronomy, the Pythagoreans were well aware of the periodic numerical relations of the planets, moon, and sun. The celestial spheres of the planets were thought to produce a harmony called the music of the spheres. These ideas, as well as the ideas of the Platonic solids, would later be used by Johannes Kepler in his attempt to formulate a model of the solar system in his work The Harmony of the Worlds. Pythagoreans also believed that the earth itself was in motion and that the laws of nature could be derived from pure mathematics. They may have coined the term cosmos, a term implying a universe with orderly movements and events.
It is sometimes difficult to determine which ideas Pythagoras taught originally, as opposed to the ideas his followers later added. While he clearly attached great importance to geometry, classical Greek writers tended to cite Thales as the great pioneer of this science rather than Pythagoras. The later tradition of Pythagoras as the inventor of mathematics stems largely from the Roman period.
Whether or not we attribute the Pythagorean theorem to Pythagoras, it seems fairly certain that he had the pioneering insight into the numerical ratios which determine the musical scale, since this plays a key role in many other areas of the Pythagorean tradition, and since no evidence remains of earlier Greek or Egyptian musical theories. Another important discovery of this school -- which upset Greek mathematics, as well as the Pythagoreans' own belief that whole numbers and their ratios could account for everything in nature -- was the incommensurability of the diagonal of a square with its side. This result showed the existence of irrational numbers.
The influence of Pythagoras has transcended the field of mathematics, and the Hippocratic Oath — with its central commitment to First do no harm — has its roots in the oath of the Pythagorean Brotherhood [1].
Other related archives475 BCE, 569 BCE, 6th century BC, Anaximander, Apollo, Aristotle, Aristoxenus, Asia Minor, Babylon, Cicero, Croton, Egypt, Euclid, Greek, Hippasus, Hippocratic Oath, Iamblichus, India, Ionian, Italy, Jains, Johannes Kepler, Mesopotamia, Metamorphoses, Music, Orphic cult, Ovid, Platonic solids, Plutarch, Polycrates, Pythagorean comma, Pythagorean theorem, Pythagoreanism, Pythagoreans, Roman, Sacred geometry, Samos, Thales, The Elements, The Harmony of the Worlds, Theano, Tyre, antiquity, astronomy, cosmos, cycles, elite, geometry, irrational numbers, lyre, mathematician, mathematics, moon, music of the spheres, musical scale, philosopher, philosophy, planets, poetry, pre-Socratics, solar system, sun, the father of numbers, tyrannical, whole numbers
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Scientific contributions", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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