- Eurytus (Pythagorean)
Eurytus ( _el. Εὔρυτος), an eminent
Pythagorean philosopher, lived c. 400 BC, whomIamblichus in one passage [Iamblichus, de Vit. Pyth. 28] describes as a native ofCroton , while in another, [Iamblichus, de Vit. Pyth. 36] he enumerates him among the Tarentine Pythagoreans. He was a disciple ofPhilolaus , andDiogenes Laërtius [Diogenes Laërtius iii. 6, viii. 46] mentions him among the teachers ofPlato , though this statement is very doubtful. It is uncertain whether Eurytus was the author of any work, unless we suppose that the fragment inStobaeus , [Stobaeus, Phys. Ecl. i.] which is there ascribed to one Eurytus, belongs to this Eurytus.Aristotle , ("Metaphysics" 1092b) mentions Eurytus, speaking about points as limits of spatial magnitude: "It was in this sense that Eurytus determined the number of anything; for he computed the number of a man or that of a horse or of any living thing by outlining its shape with pebbles, as one would number the sides of a triangle or a square," [Aristotle, "Metaphysics", 1092b. translated by Richard Hope, p. 314, Columbia University Press, 2008.]Notes
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