Pythagoras, the Master
Philolaus, Presocratic Follower
- Publisher
Lindisfarne Books - Published
5th December 2017 - ISBN 9781584209485
- Pages 154 pp.
- Size 6" x 9"
Pythagoras was one of the great geniuses of the West and yet, apart from his famous Pythagorean theorem, he is virtually unknown. If we rely on modern scholars and academics we find that his long-forgotten legacy is misunderstood and even distorted, and is therefore almost nonexistent. This new and provocative work from Carol Dunn (author of Plato’s Dialogues: Path to Initiation) accomplishes two main objectives.
First, it shows that the early pioneers of modern physics, mainly Newton and Kepler, scientifically and mathematically confirm Pythagoras’ discoveries of the sixth century bc—the heliocentric theory of our cosmos and the parallel theory regarding the Harmony of the Spheres. These are discoveries for which Pythagoras has received scant recognition by the Western philosophical tradition.
Second, the author argues against the proposition that the heliocentric theory was initiated not by Pythagoras but instead by his student Philolaus, who lived in the fifth century bc, and whose astronomical theory, according to Dunn, is not based on science.
Pythagoras, the Master is well researched and accessible, offering readers a firm basis to reexamine the importance of Pythagoras’ work and whether he or Philolaus discovered these paradigm-changing astronomical theories two thousand years before Western science rediscovered them in the seventeenth century.
C O N T E N T S:
1. Pythagoras, the Master
2. Pythagoras and Science
3. Philolaus: An Overview
4. Limiters and Unlimiteds
5. Number
6. Harmonia
7. Cosmology
8. The Heliocentric Theory
9. Harmony of the Spheres
10. Astronomy
11. Conclusions
Bibliography
Carol Dunn
CAROL DUNN was born in England and moved to the U.S., where she obtained a BA in Philosophy and Art History, and an MA in Philosophy from the City University of New York. Throughout this time she maintained a serious interest in Eastern metaphysics and studied various aspects of New Age spirituality. Her first book, Plato's Dialogues: Path to Initiation, suggests that Plato's dialogues—a testimony to rational thought—contain a subtext that reveals a step-by-step pathway to higher knowledge and eventual initiation into the mysteries. Carol is currently working on her third book that seeks to show unity in the different pathways to union with God.