Dyad (Greek philosophy)
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The Dyad is a title used by the Pythagoreans for the number two, representing the principle of "twoness" or "otherness".
Numenius said that Pythagoras gave the name of Monad to God, and the name of Dyad to matter.[1] Aristotle equated matter as the formation of the elements (energies) into the material world as the static material was formed by the energies being acted upon by force or motion. Later Neoplatonic Philosophers and idealists like Plotinus treated the dyad as a second cause (demiurge), which was the divine mind (nous) that via a reflective nature (finiteness) causes matter to "appear" or become perceivable.
[edit] See also
- Plato's Philebus
- Modal logic
- Monad (Greek philosophy)
- Triad (Greek philosophy)
- Tetrad (Greek philosophy)
- Pentad (Greek philosophy)
- Decad (Greek philosophy)
- Vesica piscis
- Ichthys
- Iamblichus of Chalcis
[edit] References
- ^ Chalcidius r.52, 5-24, as cited in Kahn, Charles N. (2001). Pythagoras and the Pythagoreans: a brief history. Indianapolis, IN: Hackett Pub. p. 172. ISBN 0-87220-575-4.

