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- From: spurrett@superbowl.und.ac.za (David Spurrett)
- Newsgroups: talk.philosophy.misc
- Subject: Re: Vegetarianism
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 09:32:34 GMT
- Organization: University Of Natal (Durban)
- Lines: 35
- Message-ID: <spurrett.115.727695154@superbowl.und.ac.za>
- References: <1993Jan18.121309.629@news.wesleyan.edu> <1993Jan19.043709.18896@news.eng.convex.com> <AG.93Jan19102635@bugs.sics.se> <1993Jan19.161211.6334@news.eng.convex.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: pc10.superbowl.und.ac.za
-
- In article <1993Jan19.161211.6334@news.eng.convex.com> cash@convex.com (Peter Cash) writes:
- >In article <AG.93Jan19102635@bugs.sics.se> ag@sics.se
- >(Anders G|ransson) writes:
- >...
- >>Don't tell me that Russell was wrong about Pythagoras and beans:
- >>
- >> "He (Pythagoras) founded a religion , of which the main tenets
- >> were the transmigration of souls and the sinfulness of eating
- >> beans" (History of Western Philosophy)
- >
- >'Tis true: Pythagoras didn't know beans.
- >
-
- By all accounts Pythagoras took the bean think very seriously, and one
- of the unusual rules of his school/sect was "abstain from beans." Among
- the many extraordinary stories about Pythagoras is one which tells of his
- having extended coversations with a cow in the course of which he pursuaded
- the cow to abstain from beans. The story does not go on to say whether or
- not Pythagoras eventually ate the cow.
-
- As is all to often the case with the "History of Western Philosophy" Russell
- is having so much fun with his writing style in the extract above that facts
- tend to take second (or later) place. It was in practice very hard to
- difficult to draw a distinction between the religion and the mathematics of
- the pythagoreans, and other intellectuals of the time. Don't forget that
- irrational number were so called ("arratos") in the same sense as we would
- call a person's behaviour irrational, and that members of the pythagorean
- sect/school are said to have executed one of their number who let the secret
- that there were such numbers become public knowledge.
-
- o---------------------------------------------------------------------------o
- | David Spurrett, Philosophy "It is the mark of an educated mind to seek |
- | Dept, Univ of Natal, Durban in each inquiry the sort of precision the |
- | spurrett@superbowl.und.ac.za nature of the subject permits." (Aristotle) |
- o---------------------------------------------------------------------------o
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