"Nicomachus concludes his first book with a theorem that indicates that mathematics was not yet free from ethical and æsthetic mixture. From Pythagoras onward two ideas were widespread in Greek, especially Platonic, philosophy. These are that the beautiful and the definite are prior to the ugly and the indefinite, and that from them are formed all the parts and classes of the infinite and indefinite. Nicomachus aims to show that in mathematics the same principle holds good in that from equality may be derived all the species of inequality."
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George Johnson, The Arithmetical Philosophy of Nicomachus of Gersa (1916)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/History_of_mathematics
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History of mathematics
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