Read Pythagoras: His Life and Teaching, a Compendium of Classical Sources Online

Authors: James Wasserman,Thomas Stanley,Henry L. Drake,J Daniel Gunther

Pythagoras: His Life and Teaching, a Compendium of Classical Sources (19 page)

BOOK: Pythagoras: His Life and Teaching, a Compendium of Classical Sources
6Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

CHAPTER 9

T
HE
P
ENTAD

T
he Pentad is the first combination of both kinds of number, even and odd—two and three.
462
Its names are these:

Reconciliation
,
463
because the fifth element, Aether, is free from the disturbances of the other four.
464

Alteration, Light
, because it changed that which was separated threefold into the Identity of its Sphere, moving circularly and engendering light.
465

Justice
,
466
because it divides ten into two equal parts.
467

The least and top of livelihood
.
468

Nemesis
,
469
because it distributes conveniently celestial, divine, and natural elements.
470

Bubastia
,
471
because worshipped at Bubastus in Egypt.
472

Venus, Gamelia, Androgynia, Cytherea, Zoneia
,
473
Marriage,
474
because it connects a masculine and feminine number:
475
consisting of two (the first even), and three (the first odd).
476

,
President of Circles
.
477

Semi-Goddess
,
478
not only as being the half of ten (which is divine), but for that it is placed in the middle.
479

Tower of Jupiter
.

Didymaea
, or
Twin
,
480
because it divides ten into two.
481

Firm Axis
.
482

Immortal, Pallas
, implying the fifth essence.
483

,
Cordial
484
from similitude with the heart.
485

Providence
, because it makes unequals equal.
486

Tρo
oς,
Sound
, the fifth being the first
diasteme.
487

Nature:
because multiplied by itself, it returns into itself. For as Nature, receiving wheat in seed—and introducing many forms by altering and changing it—at last returns it wheat at the end of the whole mutation, restoring the beginning; so, while other numbers multiplied in themselves are increased and end in other numbers; only five and six multiplied by themselves, represent and retain themselves.
488

This number represent all superior and inferior beings. For it is either the supreme God, or the mind-born of God, wherein are contained the species of all things; or the Soul of the World, which is the fountain of all souls, or celestials, down to us; or it is terrestial nature. And so the Pentad is replete with all things.
489

CHAPTER 10

T
HE
H
EXAD

T
he Pythagoreans held the number Six to be perfect, respecting (as Clement Alexandrinus conceives) the creation of the world according to the Prophet.

The names of the Hexad, are these:

Form of Form, Articulation of the Universe, Maker of the Soul, Harmony
,
490
because it has the power to produce a vital habit. Whence it is called
Hexad
,
; and
Harmony
, because all Souls are Harmonic.
491

Regarding
, †
Perfection of Parts
,
492
the Pythagoreans called it thus, imitating Orpheus—either as being the only number under ten which is whole and equal in its parts; or because the whole Universe is divided into parts by it.
493

Venus
,
494
because it procreates harmony. Six to twelve is a
diapason concord.
Six to nine is a
hemiolius.
Six to eight is
epitrites
, that is a diatessaron concord. Whence it is named Venus, who was the Mother of Harmony.
495

[“yoke”],
496
[“wedding”],
497
Marriage
,
498
because of the mixture of the first even and first odd.
499
For as marriage procreates by a male and female, so this number is generated of three (which is odd and called male), and of two (which is even and called female); for two times three make six.
500
It produces children like the parents.
501

[“central oarsman”],†
[“friendship”],
502
or
,
Conciliation
, because it conciliates the male and female.
503

Health
,
504
a triple triangle, which being alternately conjoined within itself constitutes a figure of five lines. They used it as a symbol to those of their own sect, and called it
, Health.
505

Anvil
;
506
quasi
unwearied;
because the principal triangles of the mundane elements have a share in it, being each of them Six, if measured by three perpendiculars.
507

BOOK: Pythagoras: His Life and Teaching, a Compendium of Classical Sources
6Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Ranger's Wild Woman by Tina Leonard
The Second Mouse by Archer Mayor
Team Human by Justine Larbalestier
Changed (The Hunters #1) by Rose J. Bell
Trapped by Rose Francis
The Last Time I Saw Her by Karen Robards
Mean Woman Blues by Smith, Julie
The Alpha's Pack by Conall, Tabitha