Philalethes (Greek: φιλαλήθης, philaléthēs, pronounced [filalétɛːs]) was an Ancient Greek name, also often adopted in pseudonyms (based on its literal translation, "lover of truth"). It may apply to:
- Philalethes, book by Severus of Antioch
 - Alazonomastix Philalethes, pseudonym of Henry More
 - Alexander Philalethes
 - Demosthenes Philalethes
 - Eirenaeus Philalethes, alchemical writer, now usually identified with George Starkey
 - Eugenius Philalethes, alchemical writer, now usually identified with Thomas Vaughan (philosopher)
 - Irenaeus Philalethes, pseudonym of Lewis Du Moulin
 - Philalethes Cantabrigiensis, pseudonym of James Jurin
 - Philalethes, pen-name of William Hazlitt
 - Philalethes, pseudonym of John of Saxony as translator of Dante's Divine Comedy
 - Philalethes, pen-name of Henry Portsmouth, author of an index to William Penn's works (1730)
 - Philalethes is a character in Humphry Davy's Consolations in Travel (1830)
 
See also
- Philalethes Society, Masonic organization
 
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