Form - Number - Geometry - Architecture - Light - Color - Music - Poetry
"All such disciplines, theories, and scientific investigations as truly invigorate the eye of the soul, and purify the intellect from blindness introduced by studies of a different kind, so as to enable it to perceive the true principles and causes of the universe, were unfolded by Pythagoras to the Greeks." -- Iamblichus, Life of Pythagoras
Homage to Pythagoras collects essential writings by authors at the leading edge of the sacred sciences today. Each chapter--scholarly homages to the Pythagorean perspective--confirms the continuing interest in Pythagoras' philosophy as a living reality. These authors provide a major addition to the field of Pythagorean studies and traditional mathematics.
C O N T E N T S
Introduction by Christopher Bamford
"Ancient Temple Architecture" by Robert Lawlor
"The Platonic Tradition on the Nature of Proportion" by Keith Critchlow
"What is Sacred Architecture? by Keith Critchlow
"Twelve Criteria for Sacred Architecture" by Keith Critchlow
"Pythagorean Number as Form, Color, and Light" by Robert Lawlor
"The Two Lights" by Arthur Zajonc
"Apollo: The Pythagorean Definition of God" by Anne Macaulay
"Blake, Yeats, and Pythagoras" by Kathleen Raine
Christopher Bamford is Editor in Chief, Emeritus, for SteinerBooks and its imprints. A Fellow of the Lindisfarne Association, he has lectured, taught, and written widely on Western spiritual and esoteric traditions. He is the author of The Voice of the Eagle: The Heart of Celtic Christianity (1990) and An Endless Trace: The Passionate Pursuit of Wisdom in the West(2003). He has also translated and edited numerous books, including Celtic Christianity: Ecology and Holiness (1982);Homage to Pythagoras: Rediscovering Sacred Science; and The Noble Traveller: The Life and Writings of O. V. de L. Milosz (all published by Lindisfarne Books).
Robert Lawlor is a mythographer, symbolist, and author of numerous books on the principles and practices of ancient sacred science. After training as a painter and a sculptor, he became a yoga student of Sri Aurobindo and lived for many years in Puducherry, where he was a founding member of Auroville. In India, he discovered the works of the French Egyptologist and esotericist, R. A. Schwaller de Lubicz, leading him to explore the principles and practices of ancient sacred science.
Professor Keith Critchlow (1933-2020) was a well-known lecturer and author and a founding member of Research Into Lost Knowledge Organization (RILKO), a founding member and Director of Studies of Kairos, and a founding member and President of the Temenos Academy. He was Professor Emeritus and founder of the Visual Islamic and Traditional Arts Programme at the Royal College of Art, now the Prince's School of Traditional Arts. Trained as a painter, Critchlow discovered geometry intuitively. A period of intensive geometric practice (and work with Buckminster Fuller) led him to the recognition that the universal principles of geometry are revealed and confirmed both by the area of design where art and mathematics meet and in the study of nature and ancient and medieval sacred cosmological stone, temple, cathedral, and mosque architectures. Keith Critchlow had been a senior lecturer at the Architectural Association in London, and taught Islamic Art at the Royal College of Art. He also participated as geometer in various sacred architectural projects. His books include Islamic Patterns: An Analytical and Cosmological Approach (1999); Time Stands Still: New Light on Megalithic Science (2007); and The Hidden Geometry of Flowers: Living Rhythms, Form, and Number (2011).
Kathleen Raine (1908-2003) graduated from Cambridge University in 1929. She became one of English literature's most remarkable twentyth-century practitioners. Although she considered herself primarily a poet, she was also a prolific writer of prose, an astute critic, and a distinguished scholar. Her poems and essays assert that true poetry is an expression of the spirit, the unfolding of a reality often hidden by the material appearance of things. Raine wrote a three-part autobiography (1973-1977), founded the magazine Temenos in 1981 to articulate her views, and in 1990 established the Temenos Academy of Integral Studies, a teaching academy that stressed a multistranded universalist philosophy. A professor at Cambridge and the author of a number of scholarly books, she was an expert on Coleridge, Blake, and Yeats.
Christopher Bamford is Editor in Chief, Emeritus, for SteinerBooks and its imprints. A Fellow of the Lindisfarne Association, he has lectured, taught, and written widely on Western spiritual and esoteric traditions. He is the author of The Voice of the Eagle: The Heart of Celtic Christianity (1990) and An Endless Trace: The Passionate Pursuit of Wisdom in the West(2003). He has also translated and edited numerous books, including Celtic Christianity: Ecology and Holiness (1982);Homage to Pythagoras: Rediscovering Sacred Science; and The Noble Traveller: The Life and Writings of O. V. de L. Milosz (all published by Lindisfarne Books).
"If they ever put together a new Library of Alexandria, Homage to Pythagoras should be required reading."
--John Anthony West, author of The Serpent in the Sky: The High Wisdom of Ancient Egypt"Some of the finest recent articles on Sacred Mathematics in the Pythagorean and Platonic traditions, which are still as vital and important as ever."
--Ralph Abraham, author of Chaos, Gaia, Eros"With its testimony to number and pattern at the heart of nature and of the arts, the Pythagorean tradition will always be a guiding light to Western culture."
--Joscelyn Godwin, author of The Golden Thread: The Ageless Wisdom of the Western Mystery Traditions