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- "Temple of Set Reading List:
- Category 12 - The Pythagoreans" (3/1/86CE)
- Reprinted from: _The Crystal Tablet of Set_
- (c) Temple of Set 1989 CE
- Weirdbase file version by TS permission
-
- by Michael A. Aquino, Ipsissimus VI* Temple of Set
- Electronic mail: MCI-Mail 278-4041
-
- Pythagoras, famed as the first Greek philosopher, was one of the only
- foreigners to be initiated into one or more Egyptian priesthoods prior to
- the final decadence and destruction of Egypt. Hence it is through the
- Pythagoreans and their students that many of the most sublime mathemagical
- principles have been passed down to us. Pythagoras was the first to use the
- pentagram as the symbol of his initiatory order, and death was the penalty
- for revealing its secret (phi). [See also "The Sphinx and the Chimaera" in
- the _Ruby Tablet of Set_.]
-
- 12A. _The Ancient Mysteries of Delphi: Pythagoras_ by Edouard Schure'.
- Blauvelt, NY: Rudolf Steiner, 1971. (TS-2) MA: "This small paperback
- contains a concise history of Pythagoras and his Academy at Crotona. A touch
- imaginative, as per Steiner publications in general, but on the whole a
- pleasant introduction to the subject."
-
- 12B. _Pythagoras: His Life and Teachings_ by Thomas Stanley. Los Angeles:
- Philosophical Research Society, 1970. (TS-3) MA: "I can forgive Manley P.
- Hall & Co. a lot as long as they reprint treasures like this: a handsomely-
- bound facsimile reproduction of the Ninth Section of the 1687 edition of
- Stanley's _History of Philosophy_. It contains an extensive account of
- Pythagoras and his doctrines, carefully footnoted to the original Classical
- sources. Almost any other account of Pythagoras that you come across will
- have been derived, in whole or in great part, from this book. The typeface
- and the language are 'very 17th-century', however, so be prepared for ye
- eyestrayne. Some extracts will be found in 'The Sphinx and the Chimra' in
- the _Ruby Tablet_."
-
- 12C. _The Collected Dialogues of Plato_ by Plato (Ed. Edith Hamilton &
- Huntington Cairns). Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1961. (TS-4) MA:
- "It may sound inadequate to say 'go read Plato' - sort of like saying 'go
- read the encyclopaedia'! The fact remains that this closet student of
- Pythagoras [cf. Alban Winspear, _The Genesis of Plato's Thought_, NY: S.A.
- Russell, 1940] incorporated a wealth of Pythagorean philosophy into his
- _Dialogues_ and letters. This volume remains the standard academic
- translation. And, since it contains all of Plato's works [in fine print, on
- microthin paper], cross-referencing - indispensable where Plato is
- concerned! - is possible."
-
- 12D. _The Divine Proportion: A Study in Mathematical Beauty_ by H.E.
- Huntley. NY: Dover Publications #0-486-22254-3, 1970. (TS-4) (OT-1) MA: "If
- you enjoyed J. Bronowski's 'Music of the Spheres' episode on Pythagoras in
- the _Ascent of Man_ series/book, you'll like this little book - since it was
- one of J.B.'s primary sources. The text alternates between aesthetics and
- mathematics, with some rather hefty formulae included. Supplementary
- chapters touch upon the Fibonacci Numbers, Pascal's triangle, and other
- 'golden ratios' of science and nature."
-
- 12E. _The Secrets of Ancient Geometry_ by Tons Brunes. Copenhagen, Denmark:
- "The Ancient Geometry" (Nygaardsvej 41, Copenhagen 0), 1968 [two-volume
- set]. (TS-4) (OT-4) MA: "The word for this work is 'staggering'. 583 pages
- long, about $50. Extensive chapters on the mathematics and architecture of
- the Egyptians, Greeks, Romans, and their offshoots. A wealth of precision
- diagrams and formulae."
-
- 12F. _The Theoretic Arithmetic of the Pythagoreans_ by Thomas Taylor. NY:
- Samuel Weiser, 1972 [originally published 1816]. (TS-4) (OT-4) MA: "In the
- author's words [from the 1816 title page]: 'The substance of all that has
- been written on this subject by Theo of Smyrna, Nichomachus, Iamblichus, and
- Boetius; together with some remarkable particulars respecting perfect,
- amicable, and other numbers, and a development of their mystical and
- theological arithmetic.' A technical text by a distinguished scholar.
- Compare with #2N and #12E."
-
- 12G. _Pythagoras: A Life_ by Peter Gorman. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul,
- 1979. (TS-3) MA: "Quite simply - and in 216 pages - the most well-written,
- carefully researched, and objective biography of Pythagoras to date. Also
- included are chapters on philosophers contemporary with Pythagoras, as well
- as on certain key aspects of his philosophy.
-
-
-