Online Encyclopedia

NEOPYTHAGOREANISM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 378 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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NEOPYTHAGOREANISM  , a Graeco-Alexandrian school of

philosophy, which became prominent in the 1st century A.D . Very little is known about the members of this school, and there has been much discussion as to whether the
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Pythagorean literature which was widely published at the time in Alexandria was the
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original
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work of 1st-century writers or merely reproductions of and commentaries on the older Pythagorean writings . The only well-known members of the school were
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Apollonius of Tyana and Moderatus of Gades . In the previous century
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Cicero's learned friend P . Nigidius Figulus (d . 45 B.C.) had made an attempt to revive Pythagorean doctrines, but he cannot be described as a member of the school . Further, it is necessary to distinguish from the Neopythagoreans a number of Eclectic Platonists, who, during the 1st century of our era, maintained views which had a similar tendency (e.g . Apuleius of Madaura, Plutarch of Chaeronea and, later,
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Numenius of
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Apamea) . Neopythagoreanism was the first product of an age in which abstract philosophy had begun to
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pall . The
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Stoics discovered that their " perfect man " was not to be found in the luxurious, often morbid society of the Graeco-
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Roman
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world; that some-thing more than dialectic ethics was needed to reawaken a sense of responsibility . A degenerate society cared nothing for syllogisms grown threadbare by repetition . Neopythagoreanism was an attempt to introduce a religious element into pagan philosophy in place of what had come to be regarded as an arid formalism .

The founders of the school sought to invest their doctrines with the

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halo of tradition by ascribing them to Pythagoras and
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Plato, and there is no reason to accuse them of insincerity . They went back to the later period of Plato's thought, the period when Plato endeavoured to combine his
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doctrine of Ideas with the Pythagorean number-theory, and identified the Good with the One, the source of the duality of the Infiniteand the Measured (ro &recpov and Irrpas) with the resultant scale of realities from the One down to the
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objects of the material world . They emphasized the fundamental distinction between the Soul and the
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Body .
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God must be worshipped spiritually by prayer and the will to be good, not in outward
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action . The soul must be freed from its material surrounding, the " muddy vesture of decay," by an ascetic habit of
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life . Bodily pleasures and all sensuous impulses must be abandoned as detrimental to the spiritual purity of the soul . God is the principle of good;
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Matter (An) the groundwork of Evil . In this
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system we distinguish not only the
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asceticism of Pythagoras and the later mysticism of Plato, but also the influence of the Orphic mysteries and of
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Oriental philosophy . The Ideas of Plato are no longer self-subsistent entities; they are the elements which constitute the content of spiritual activity . The Soul is no longer an appanage of ovala, it is ou ria itself : the non-material universe is regarded as the sphere of mind or spirit . Thus Neopythagoreanism is a
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link in the chain between the old and the new in pagan philosophy . It connects the teaching of Plato with the doctrines of
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Neoplatonism and brings it into
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line with the later Stoicism and with the ascetic system of the
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Essenes .

A comparison between the Essenes and the Neopythagoreans shows a parallel so striking as to

warrant the theory that the Essenes were profoundly influenced by Neopythagoreanism . Lastly Neopythagoreanism furnished Neoplatonism with the weapons with which pagan philosophy made its last stand against
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Christianity . See PYTHAGORAS, NEOPLATONISM, ESSENES; and Zeller's Philosophie d . Griechen . For members of the school see APOLLONIUS OF TYANA and MODERATOS OF GADES .

End of Article: NEOPYTHAGOREANISM
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