Metrodorus of Cos

Metrodorus of Cos (Greek: Μητρόδωρος τῆς Κῶ; fl. c. 460 BC) was the son of Epicharmus. Like several of his family he addicted himself partly to the study of Pythagorean philosophy, partly to the science of medicine. He wrote a treatise upon the works of Epicharmus, in which, on the authority of Epicharmus and Pythagoras himself, he maintained that the Doric was the proper dialect of the Orphic hymns.[1]

Notes

  1. ^ Iamblichus, The Life of Pythagoras 34.241–2.

References

  • Iamblichus, The Life of Pythagoras, translated by Kenneth Sylvan Launfal Guthrie, Alpine, New Jersey, Platonist Press, 1919. Online version at ToposText.
  • Smith, William, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, London (1873). Metrodo'rus, literary (1). Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Ancient Greek schools of philosophy
Proto-philosophy
  • Epimenides
  • Pherecydes
Seven Sages
Pre-Socratic
Ionian
Milesian
Heraclitean
Italian
Pythagorean
Skeptic
Eleatic
  • Hippo
Pluralist
Ionian
  • Anaxagoras
  • Archelaus
  • Metrodorus of Lampsacus
  • Italian
    Atomist
    Sophist
    Ionian
    Italian
    Classical
    Cynic
    Cyrenaic
    Eretrian
    Megarian
    Dialecticians
    Platonic
    Peripatetic
    Hellenistic
    Pyrrhonist
    Stoic
    Epicurean
    Academic Skeptic
    Middle Platonic
    Neopythagorean
    Neoplatonist
    Second Sophistic


    Stub icon

    This biography of a philosopher from Ancient Greece is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

    • v
    • t
    • e