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It is highly probable that the Greek initiates gained their knowledge of the philosophic and therapeutic aspects of music from the Egyptians, who, in turn, considered Hermes the founder of the art. According to one legend, this god constructed the first lyre by stretching strings across the concavity of a turtle shell. Both Isis and Osiris were patrons of music and poetry. Plato, in describing the antiquity of these arts among the Egyptians, declared that songs and poetry had existed in Egypt for at least ten thousand years, and that these were of such an exalted and inspiring nature that only gods or godlike men could have composed them. In the Mysteries the lyre was regarded as the secret symbol of the human constitution, the body of the instrument representing the physical form, the strings the nerves, and the musician the spirit. Playing upon the nerves, the spirit thus created the harmonies of normal functioning, which, however, became discords if the nature of man were defiled.

While the early Chinese, Hindus, Persians, Egyptians, Israelites, and Greeks employed both vocal and instrumental music in their religious ceremonials, also to complement their poetry and drama, it remained for Pythagoras to raise the art to its true dignity by demonstrating its mathematical foundation. Although it is said that he himself was not a musician, Pythagoras is now generally credited with the discovery of the diatonic scale. Having first learned the divine theory of music from the priests of the various Mysteries into which he had been accepted, Pythagoras pondered for several years upon the laws governing consonance and dissonance. How he actually solved the problem is unknown, but the following explanation has been invented.

One day while meditating upon the problem of harmony, Pythagoras chanced to pass a brazier's shop where workmen were pounding out a piece of metal upon an anvil. By noting the variances in pitch between the sounds made by large hammers and those made by smaller implements, and carefully estimating the harmonies and discords resulting from combinations of these sounds, he gained his first clue to the musical intervals of the diatonic scale. He entered the shop, and after carefully examining the tools and making mental note of their weights, returned to his own house and constructed an arm of wood so that it: extended out from the wall of his room. At regular intervals along this arm he attached four cords, all of like composition, size, and weight. To the first of these he attached a twelve-pound weight, to the second a nine-pound weight, to the third an eight-pound weight, and to the fourth a six-pound weight. These different weights corresponded to the sizes of the braziers' hammers.

Pythagoras thereupon discovered that the first and fourth strings when sounded together produced the harmonic interval of the octave, for doubling the weight had the same effect as halving the string. The tension of the first string being twice that of the fourth string, their ratio was said to be 2:1, or duple. By similar experimentation he ascertained that the first and third string produced the harmony of the diapente, or the interval of the fifth. The tension of the first string being half again as much as that of the third string, their ratio was said to be 3:2, or sesquialter. Likewise the second and fourth strings, having the same ratio as the first and third strings, yielded a diapente harmony. Continuing his investigation, Pythagoras discovered that the first and second strings produced the harmony of the diatessaron, or the interval of the third; and the tension of the first string being a third greater than that of the second string, their ratio was said to be 4:3, or sesquitercian. The third and fourth strings, having the same ratio as the first and second strings, produced another harmony of the diatessaron. According to Iamblichus, the second and third strings had the ratio of 8:9, or epogdoan.

The key to harmonic ratios is hidden in the famous Pythagorean tetractys, or pyramid of dots. The tetractys is made up of the first four numbers--1, 2, 3, and 4--which in their proportions reveal the intervals of the octave, the diapente, and the diatessaron. While the law of harmonic intervals as set forth above is true, it has been subsequently proved that hammers striking metal in the manner

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10y ago
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13y ago

Pythagoras discovered relationships between the length of strings plucked and the musical note they would produce. A string twice the length of another would produce a note an octave below the shorter string.

This principle was used not only in string instruments but generalized to pipes as well.

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9y ago

There are quite a few ways that the Pythagorean Theorem can be seen and used in music. This theorem is often used to explain different pitches and pitch class relationships for example.

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14y ago

That the discovery of music was based on internals of 4

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13y ago

i know that he took a string and divided it by half , finding the octave. and he kept on dividing the string and found different tones

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Q: How did the Pythagoras contribute to ancient music theory?
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Did Pythagoras invent the greek music scale?

Pythagoras was a Greek mathematician who had several inventions. Pythagoras created the Pythagorean scale, a music scale that was commonly used throughout Greece.


What did Pythagoras discover about music?

he played the lyre


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What other M word did Pythagoras study?

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What impact has Pythagoras had on the modern world?

Pythagoras was an advanced Greek mathematician for his time. His impact was his discovering the numerical ratios of intervals in the music scales along with his theorem that the square on the hypotenuse of a right angled triangle is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two sides. Amazing for ancient times.


What were Pythagoras's interest's?

Metaphysics, Music, Mathematics, Ethics, Politics


What other M-word did Pythagoras study and connect with mathematics?

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What has the author David E Creese written?

David E. Creese has written: 'The monochord in ancient Greek harmonic science' -- subject(s): History, Musical intervals and scales, Music theory, Monochord 'The monochord in ancient Greek harmonic science' -- subject(s): Musical intervals and scales, Music theory, Monochord, History


What website can you copy a music theory?

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Who taught that the universe fallowed the same rules as music and numbers?

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