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others attribute various works to him Jamblichus, On the Life of Pythagoras, book 1, chapter 19., about which there is no time to say much in this place. Nor will there be talk of his transmigration of souls, which, taken literally, imposes a harsh fate upon the soul while it is able to receive it.
But just as he veiled the face of truth with other enigmas, so that he would not prostitute philosophy to the people he hated, he also acts here under a veil.
Yet who his opinion on Fate was, Crito or Damippus the Pythagorean would have taught more clearly, if his book were also extant, which Stobaeus Stobaeus, in Sententiae, Sermon 1, page 29; and in Eclogae ethicae, regarding what is in our power. cites on Fortune. He likewise commemorates Ibid., in Eclogae physicae, book 1, chapter 10. the book on Fortune by some Eurysius, and the work on Felicity by Hippodamus of Thurii, the Pythagorean Ibid., Sermon, chapter 1..