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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ArignoteArignote - Wikipedia

    Arignote or Arignota ( / ˌærɪɡˈnoʊtiː, ˌærɪɡˈnoʊtə /; Greek: Ἀριγνώτη, Arignṓtē; fl. c. 500 BC) was a Pythagorean philosopher from Croton, [1] Magna Graecia, or from Samos. [2] . She was known as a student of Pythagoras and Theano [2] and, according to some traditions, their daughter as well. [3] [4] [5] Life.

  2. Arignote (fl. 6th c. bce) Pythagorean philosopher. Born in Crotona, Italy, to Pythagoras of Samos (philosopher, mathematician, politician, spiritual leader) and Theano of Crotona (Pythagorean philosopher); sister of Myia, Damo, Telauges and Mnesarchus; educated at the School of Pythagoras.

  3. Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology. Arignote An early ghost story told by the ancient Greek writer Lucian (second century C.E.). The story relates that at Corinth, in the Cranaüs quarter, there was a certain house that no one would inhabit, because it was haunted by a specter.

  4. Arignote wrote a Bacchica concerning the mysteries of Demeter, and a work called The Rites of Dionysus. Among the Pythagorean Sacred Discourses there is a dictum attributed to Arignote: The eternal essence of number is the most providential cause of the whole heaven, earth and the region in between.

  5. Abstract. Pythagoreanism represented an active and popular school of philosophy from the end of the 6th century B.C. through the 2nd or 3rd centuries A.D. The original or “early” Pythagoreans included the immediate members of his family and other successors who headed Pythagorean societies or cults in parts of Greece and southern Italy ...

  6. I. THEMISTOCLEA, ARIGNOTE, AND DAMO The ancient sources indicate that women were active in early Pythagorean societies and may have played a central role in the development of early Pythagorean philosophy. Diogenes Laertius2 reports that: Aristonexus asserts that Pythagoras derived the greater part

  7. Meno the Crotonian. Era. Pre-Socratic philosophy. Region. Western philosophy. School. Pythagoreanism. Damo ( / ˈdeɪmoʊ /; Greek: Δαμώ; fl. c. 500 BC) was a Pythagorean philosopher said by many to have been the daughter of Pythagoras and Theano. [1]

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