the Fourth Week of Advent
Click here to join the effort!
Bible Encyclopedias
Pherecydes of Syros
1911 Encyclopedia Britannica
Greek philosopher (or rather philosophical theologian), flourished during the 6th century B.C. He was sometimes reckoned one of the Seven Wise Men, and is said to have been the teacher of Pythagoras. With the possible C 6 H 4 /C (C6H4 OH)2 ?0, CsH /CLCeI14]z0� ?CO ? ?, CO / CO / I. Diphenylphthalide, II. Phenolphthalein, III. Fluorane. CH(C6H4.OH)2 exception of Cadmus of Miletus, he was the first Greek prose-writer. He belonged to the circle of Peisistratus at Athens, and was the founder of an Orphic community. He is characterized as "one of the earliest representatives of a half-critical, half-credulous eclecticism" (Gomperz). He was credited with having originated the doctrine of metempsychosis, while Cicero and Augustine assert that he was the first to teach the immortality of the soul. Of his astronomical studies he left a proof in the "heliotropion," a cave at Syros which served to determine the annual turning-point of the sun, like the grotto of Posillipo (Posilipo, Posilippo) at Naples, and was one of the sights of the island.
In his cosmogonic treatise on nature and the gods, called Hevr4tvxo (Preller's correction of Suidas, who has E7rTaµuXos) from the five elementary or original principles (aether, fire, air, water, earth; Gomperz substitutes smoke and darkness for aether and earth), he enunciated a system in which science, allegory and mythology were blended. In the beginning were Chronos, the principle of time; Zeus (Zas), the principle of life; and Chthonie, the earth goddess. Chronos begat fire, air and water, and from these three sprang numerous other gods; Smoke and darkness appear in a later tradition. A fragment of the "sacred marriage" of Zas and Chthonie was found on an Egyptian papyrus at the end of the r9th century.
See H. Diels, Fragmente der Vorsokratiker (1903); also 0. Kern, De Orphei, Epimenidis, Pherecydis theogoniis (1888); D. Speliotopoulos, IIEpi ' EpEid60v (Athens, 1890); T. Gomperz, Greek Thinkers (Eng. trans.), i. 85; B. P. Grenfell, New Classical Fragments (1897); H. Weil, Etudes sur l'antiquite grecque (1900).
These files are public domain.
Chisholm, Hugh, General Editor. Entry for 'Pherecydes of Syros'. 1911 Encyclopedia Britanica. https://www.studylight.org/​encyclopedias/​eng/​bri/​p/pherecydes-of-syros.html. 1910.