an Entity references as follows:
Leodamas of Thasos (Greek: Λεωδάμας ὁ Θάσιος, c. 380 BC) was a Greek mathematician and a contemporary of Plato, about whom little is known. There are two references to Leodamas in Proclus's Commentary on Euclid: At this time [Plato's time] also lived Leodamas of Thasos, Archytas of Tarentum, and Theaetetus of Athens, by whom the theorems [of geometry] were increased in number and brought into a more scientific arrangement. Younger than Leodamas was Neoclides and his pupil Leon, who added many discoveries. and one in Diogenes Laërtius' Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers, Book 3 (Plato):