Pythagoras did not attend a formal school in the modern sense, but he studied in various places, including Egypt and Babylon, where he learned mathematics, astronomy, and philosophy. He later founded his own school in Croton (in present-day Italy), which combined religious, philosophical, and mathematical teachings. This community of followers, known as the Pythagoreans, emphasized the importance of numbers and their relationships in understanding the universe.
Pythagoras didn't make a school, Other people made the school in honor of Pythagoras
Pythagoras did not attend a traditional school as we think of it today; instead, he traveled to various places to learn from different philosophers and scholars. He studied in Babylon and Egypt, where he was exposed to mathematics, astronomy, and mystical teachings. Pythagoras later founded his own school in Croton (modern-day Italy), where he taught his followers his philosophical and mathematical ideas.
gay
Pythagoras didn't go to college. He learned from his travels and specific teachers.
It was the ancient mathematician Pythagoras
Pythagoras didn't make a school, Other people made the school in honor of Pythagoras
School of Pythagoras was created in 1200.
Democratic school.
he started school in heaven
Pythagoras did not attend a traditional school as we think of it today; instead, he traveled to various places to learn from different philosophers and scholars. He studied in Babylon and Egypt, where he was exposed to mathematics, astronomy, and mystical teachings. Pythagoras later founded his own school in Croton (modern-day Italy), where he taught his followers his philosophical and mathematical ideas.
helmontus school
Keep the secrets of the school and not eat beans. No, really: Pythagoras had a neurotic fear of beans.
Of course he was!
gay
Geometry
To school children in the Western world, Pythagoras is probably best known for Pythagoras theorem. However, apart from Eurocentrism, there is little to connect Pythagoras with the theorem since it was known to Mesopotemian, Chinese and Indian mathematicians for centuries before Pythagoras.
YES