He is probably not the same person as Bryson of Heraclea,[7] the sophist and mathematician who seems to have lived in the time of Socrates. The Suda, in its entry on Socrates,[8] may be confusing the two Brysons when it refers to Bryson of Heraclea:
Bryson of Heraclea introduced eristic dialectic after Euclides,[9] whereas Clinomachus augmented it, and whereas many came on account of it, it came to an end with Zeno of Citium, for he gave it the name Stoic, after its location, this having occurred in the 105th Olympiad;[10] but some [say that] Bryson was a student not of Socrates but of Euclides
Notes
^ abDiogenes Laërtius, ix. 61. Diogenes Laërtius literally says "Pyrrho was a pupil of Bryson the son of Stilpo." Bryson is unlikely to have been the son of Stilpo. Laërtius may mean that Bryson was a pupil of Stilpo. This line is sometimes emended to "Pyrrho was a pupil of Bryson or Stilpo."
^"Not the same as Bryson of Heracleia, whom we know from the Platonic Epistles, from Aristotle, and from Athenaeus (xi. p. 508)." Robert Drew Hicks, Diogenes Laertius: Lives of Eminent Philosophers, page 88. Loeb Classical Library.