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THE INFLUENCE OF PLOTINUS ON MARSILIO FICINO‘S DOCTRINE OF THE
HIERARCHY OF BEING
by
Nora I. Ayala
A Thesis submitted to the Faculty of
The Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters
in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of
Master of Arts
Florida Atlantic University
Boca Raton, Florida
May 2011
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I wish to express my sincere thanks to those who were, have been, and are a part
of my life. I am who I am because of their unique gifts.
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ABSTRACT
Author: Nora I. Ayala
Title: The Influence of Plotinus on Marsilio Ficino‘s Doctrine of the
Hierarchy of Being
Institution: Florida Atlantic University
Thesis Advisor: Marina Paola Banchetti, Ph.D.
Degree: Master of Arts
Year: 2011
Marsilio Ficino provides the ground to consider Renaissance Platonism as a
distinctive movement within the vast context of Renaissance philosophy. Ficino‘s
Platonism includes traces of earlier humanistic thought and ideas from Neoplatonic
philosophers such as Plotinus, Proclus, and Dionysius the Areopagite. Ficino was able to
rebuild a traditional philosophy that, from the ancient Greeks to Plotinus, had established
the harmony between paganism and Christianity. Neoplatonism, characterized by
complex metaphysical, ethical, and psychological canons, provided the grounds for
Ficino‘s cosmological challenge to merge the cyclical aspect of the universe with the
religious notion of the soul, in order to secure its cosmic position. Ficino adopted Plotinus
hierarchy of being as a dominant component of his own thought. His formulations on the
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three hypostases and the movements of the soul allow him to develop his own hierarchy
of the universe, in which soul anchors the metaphysics of the structure and reaffirms its
ontological nature as immortal.
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THE INFLUENCE OF PLOTINUS OF MARSILIO FICINO‖S DOCTRINE OF THE
HIERARCHY OF BEING
INTRODUCTION ...........................................................................................................1
CHAPTER I ....................................................................................................................6
Neoplatonism as a Philosophical Movement ................................................................6
Plotinus as a Neoplatonist: The Enneads .................................................................... 11
The Three Primary Hypostases ( Enneads V. 1) .......................................................... 17
Soul ....................................................................................................................... 21
Intellect .................................................................................................................. 24
The One ................................................................................................................. 26
The One and the Theory of Emanation ....................................................................... 28
CHAPTER II ................................................................................................................. 35
Neoplatonic Heritage and Pseudo-Dionysius.............................................................. 35
CHAPTER III ................................................................................................................ 51
Renaissance Platonism ............................................................................................... 51
Marsilio Ficino as a Renaissance Platonist ................................................................. 53
The Hierarchy of Being ............................................................................................. 54
CONCLUSION ............................................................................................................. 78
BIBLIOGRAPHY ......................................................................................................... 82
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INTRODUCTION
If each of us, essentially, is that which is greatest within us, which always remains
the same and by which we understand ourselves, then certainly the soul is the man
himself and the body but his shadow. Whatever wretch is so deluded as to think
that the shadow of man is man, like Narcissus is dissolved in tears. You will only
cease to weep, Gismondo, when you cease looking for your Alberia degli Albizzi
in her dark shadow and begin to follow her by her own clear light.1
Marsilio Ficino, a Florentine priest who has been described as a combination of
scholar, philosopher, and magus, not only revived Plato for Renaissance thought but also
introduced into his own philosophy several Neoplatonic philosophers such as Plotinus,
Proclus, and Dionysius the Areopagite. His profound understanding of their metaphysics
provided him with a better understanding of pagan ideas, thereby facilitating his
reconciliation of Platonism with Christianity. His own vision of unity, however,
surpassed that of his philosophical ancestors in that it is a totalizing unity, in which the
universe is seen as a manifestation of the One, God, or the Good. His Platonic
evangelization has influenced European thought to the present time, most fundamentally
through his teaching that:
1 Marsilio Ficino, Meditations on the Soul: Selected Letters of Marsilio Ficino, trans. from the Latin by
members of the Language Department of the School of Economic Science, (Vermont: Inner Traditions
International, 1997), 15.
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The human soul was immortal and unlimited, [which] links directly with the
unshakeable confidence and creative genius that so many of the giants of the
Renaissance expressed in so many fields. His view that the whole creation was
moved by love and inspired to return to God through His beauty was reflected in
the intense beauty of physical form that the masters of the Renaissance manifested
with such skill. His emphasis on the importance of human nature and the virtues
that lie within it gave support to a new direction in education. Ultimately it is the
practice of these virtues that leads to the discovery of the divine in man.2
Of all his commentaries, letters, writings, translations, and interpretations of
Plato, Plotinus, and other Neoplatonists, his own Platonic Theology is the most
influential work because it played a central ―role in the Lateran council‘s promulgation of
the immortality of the soul as a dogma in 1512.‖3 The Platonic Theology was written at
the beginning of the 1470s, a time during which Ficino finished the first epic translation
of Plato‘s works, entered the priesthood, and tried to draft a ―unitary theological tradition,
and particularly a theological metaphysics.‖4 It can be described not only as a summa
theologica, but also as a summa philosophica, and a summa platonica, an audacious,
sometimes problematic, endeavor to re-emerge ancient and late ancient philosophy for an
intellectual and governing elite, who were the Florentine equivalents of Socrates‘ most
intelligent audience, with a style which imitates in Latin what Plotinus did in Greek,
2Marsilio Ficino, Meditations on the Soul, xix.
3 Marsilio Ficino, Platonic Theology, trans. by Michael J. B. Allen with John Warden, Latin text edited by
James Hankins with William Bowen, Volume I, (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2001), viii.
4 Ibid., ix.
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approaching sublimity in a manner that is both, simple and ―rhetorically challenging.‖5
Ficino considered his Platonic Theology his major and longest philosophical toil, his
masterpiece in which he developed his search for the existence of an afterlife and which
included notions of the mind, spirit, and body, reserving for the human soul a privileged
place in the hierarchy of God‘s creation, appealing to medieval and scholastic theories
but mainly reviving ―ancient theosophical themes‖6 which will foresee the predominantly
cosmological theories characteristic of the late Renaissance philosophers and
astronomers. Ficino formulates a hierarchy which is unity within plurality, ―an ordered
song which is both inside and outside the soul both as unitary self and as all things – a
part becomes the whole, a whole of parts and in parts, in the world and yet in God as
God.‖7
Since Ficino is considered a Renaissance Platonist, the Platonic Theology
includes references to Plato and Plotinus but, as the name‘s similarity to Proclus‘s
Theologia Platonica insinuates , it is also a tribute to this last Neoplatonist, who carried
Plato into the Middle Ages. The subtitle On the Immortality of the Soul is exactly the
same subtitle as that of Plotinus‘s Enneads 4.7 which marks the clear indebtedness to
both Plotinus and Marius Victorinus, who translated Porphyry‘s compilation of the
Enneads into Latin. In his letter to Besarion, the Greek cardinal of Sabina, Ficino
describes Plato‘s discussion on beauty in Phaedrus as referring to the beauty of the soul,
required from God, that is called wisdom and is compared with gold. ―When this gold
5 Marsilio Ficino, Platonic Theology, ix.
6 Ibid., x.
7 Ibid.
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was given to Plato by God, it shone in him most brilliantly, because he was so pure in
heart.‖8 And he adds later that when that gold was first put into Plotinus‘s work, ―then
that of Porphyry, Iamblichus, and eventually of Proclus, the earth was removed by the
searching test of fire, and the gold so shone that it filled the whole world again with
marvelous splendor.‖9
It is clear that Plotinus‘s mystical formulations on the soul greatly influenced
Ficino‘s development of his own hierarchy of being and the role of soul from both
ontological and metaphysical perspectives. From the ontological perspective, soul is
considered immortal by creation and able to transcend death and, from the metaphysical
perspective, it is considered to have a twofold opposition of structures or natures. Based
on Plotinus‘s two assumptions, Ficino places the soul in the middle of his pentadic
structure, where it is located at the dividing line between the intelligible and the sensible
realms and is able to ascend toward the eternal realm through contemplation and also,
through energies and activities, to descend to the temporal realm. This privileged position
in the middle of the hierarchy enables soul to link the eternal to the temporal, to become
the microcosm that contains within man all the reflections of what is in the eternal realm,
and to sustain the metaphysics of the hierarchical structure.
The emphasis of this thesis will be the study of three different philosophies, which
are intimately connected, following a chronological order. Chapter I will discuss
Neoplatonism as the last great movement in ancient philosophy. The focus will be on
Plotinus and on the influential role of his treatises compiled as the Enneads, on the three
8 Marsilio Ficino, Meditations on the Soul , 82.
9 Ibid., 83.
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Although the term Neoplatonism entails that this movement was primarily
influenced by Plato, it distinguished itself in several ways during the five hundred years
that separated Plato from Plotinus. As a matter of fact, two theories have been argued on
the applicability of the term. One branches from ―nineteenth-century German scholarship,
and bears no relation to the self-understanding of Plotinus and his followers, who, no
doubt, understood themselves as simply the spiritual and philosophical pupils of Plato‖.11
For them it was more important to prove Plato‘s philosophy correct than to claim their
own originality. The second theory is that the name builds a false gap between the
Neoplatonists and the Middle-Platonists, ignoring the fact that there exists a continuity of
thought between Plotinus and the later Platonists. Because Plotinus‘s works survived the
test of time, unlike the others, there may be support for this last theory. Neoplatonism is
closely related to Middle-Platonism, which begins around 130 BCE and lasts until the
late-second century CE. This crucial and challenging period marks a return to a stricter
reading of Plato, combined with the doctrines of Aristotle, the Stoics, Pythagoras, and
synthesizing Plato‘s formulation of the intelligible realm with Aristotle‘s perfect intellect
or Nous, ―separated from the individual human intellects [thereby] rendering Platonic
forms as contents of the supreme intellect.‖12
But the most important aspects of
Neoplatonism, which make it unique in its approach to Platonism, are the following five
characteristics:
11 Pauliina Remes, 2.
12 Ibid., 5.
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1. The formulation of the One, which is superior to the Nous or Aristotelian intellect,
as a first principle from which everything emanates and which is indefinable,
while the emanations are accessible by reason.
2. The multiple metaphysical levels proposed by Plotinus, which are more complex
than the Platonic idea of two different realms; one material, changeable, and
temporal and the other eternal, immaterial, and permanent. For Plato, the
empirical realm is just an imitation of the eternal realm, which is true reality.
3.
The Platonic idea that the higher realm is prior, more perfect, simpler, and more
unified than the metaphysically lower realm is applied to a ―hierarchical
metaphysical system‖13which extends from perfect unity to the multiple
manifestations of the observable realm, in which the goodness of the higher level
diminishes further at each lower level.
4. The central levels of reality are both metaphysically real and intimately connected
to the human soul. ―Neoplatonists as metaphysical realists‖14
believe that reality
exists independently from the human mind but also that reality inhabits in the
mind. Therefore, ―the complexity of thinking must coincide with the complexity
of being. Reality is thereby essentially minded or intelligible, that is both
intelligibly organized and penetrable to reason, as well as in some sense
essentially thought.‖15
13Pauliina Remes, 7.
14 Ibid., 8.
15 Ibid.
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5. The desire for wholeness, completion, and perfection belongs to the non-
intellectual life. The motivation to continue life and existence that is observable in
nature responds to the vertical effort to achieve the perfection of its origin and to
rise, at last, towards the absolute unity of the source of the hierarchy. The
contemplative character of creation, where the created constantly looks upward
toward the creator or origin causes a tendency to return to the first principle. This
upward or vertical movement is one of the most distinctive features of
Neoplatonism.
Neoplatonism exemplifies the role that philosophy played in antiquity. Philosophy was
seen as a way of life of which the main task was to heal the soul. For Neoplatonists, the
healing of the soul was achieved through a journey to the inner self by internal
contemplation, an activity that was not contrary to reason but was ―a kind of intellectual
intensification.‖16
Plotinus considered the role of reason as important in the therapy of the
soul, but he located the spiritual and ecstatic experiences outside the rational faculty. The
later Neoplatonists, on the other hand, favored theurgy, the process by which man tries to
be god-like by trying to subdue the desires and passions of the body to the use of reason,
which was considered ―the most divine aspect of human nature.‖17
In Neoplatonism, philosophical studies were combined with religious practices in
which prayer and mystical rituals were also incorporated. Theurgy became a captivating
object of study of religion, religious practices, mysticism, and meditation. At the
Neoplatonic school, philosophical studies did not begin until the purification of the soul
16 Pauliina Remes, 9.
17 Ibid., 10.
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had been achieved. Students became acquainted with the Pythagorean Golden Verses
followed by Aristotle‘s Metaphysics as an introduction to philosophical matters
concerning nature and the sensible realm. While most Middle-Platonist believed that
Plato and Aristotle displayed some degree of harmony and philosophers previous to
Plotinus showed animosity towards Aristotle, Plotinus tried to portray Aristotle‘s position
as conflicting and, therefore, tried to complement or substitute it with Platonic ideas.18
After Porphyry, the notion that the two theories were compatible was accepted. Once the
student of Neoplatonism had reached clarity of thought and learned the art of
argumentation, Plato‘s dialogues were then introduced, not in chronological order but in a
peculiar order that served the purpose of the school‘s curriculum. Special emphasis was
placed on the dialogues Timaeus and Parmenides, because both deal with metaphysics
and cosmological order. While the first of those offers explanation for the ―physical‖
aspect of Neoplatonism, the second of those establishes the foundation for the idea of the
One as a separate entity from being.
Several ancient philosophical schools had some influence on the development of
Neoplatonism. These were skepticism and stoicism which provided Plotinus with some
materialistic ideas that he adjusted to his non-materialistic philosophy. ―The Stoic
conception of the physical universe permeated by internal ‗sympathy‘ had an influence
on the way the Neoplatonists regarded nature and the hypostasis Soul as responsible for
the temporal and living unity of the cosmos.‖19
But it is also important to examine how
Neoplatonism related to the two most prominent religious movements prevalent in the
18 Pauliina Remes, 11.
19 Ibid., 14.
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Roman Empire at the time; Christianity and Gnosticism. All of them had in common the
belief in one god or first principle, in the immortality of the soul and its return to the first
principle, in evil, prayer, and mystical experiences. The differences between them,
however, were based on the discrepancy between the simple Neoplatonic One, which
created out of necessity, and the anthropomorphic Christian God, and between the
Christian return to God through personal salvation and the Neoplatonic idea of an ascent
of the soul to achieve perfect goodness. Of the three movements, Neoplatonism was the
only one loyal to philosophical argumentation, in addition to its spiritual and mystical
characteristics.
Plotinus as a Neoplatonist: The Enneads
The philosophy of Plotinus provided an answer to the anxiety experienced during
the third century CE in the Roman Empire, in which twenty-nine emperors reigned
during a period of seventy years. Social and political unrest were provoked internally by
antagonists and externally by the hostility of barbarians, who threatened the stability of
the empire. The Stoics‘ exhortation to accept reality as it was, in order to become
untouchable by the swings of fate, was no longer convincing. Therefore, a philosophy
which established that the freedom of the soul would not be achieved in the empirical
world but by ascending into an ideal realm gave credence to the idea that the political and
social unrest of society should not interfere with the soul‘s ultimate aspiration.
Accordingly, we find an inspirational disregard in Plotinus for ordinary matters, and this
disregard and silence about them is ―the only tribute which Plotinus ever pays to the
turbulences which after all must have been an insistent enough fact in people‘s lives— but
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a formidable tribute it is, as it signifies the philosopher‘s sense of powerlessness in regard
to the ordinary world.‖20
It seems that Plotinus‘s purpose as a philosopher was to chart
the insensible realm, the world that transcends sensory reality, and to live in it abundantly
despite the soul‘s ties to the human body. His philosophy has its roots in the Hellenic
tradition, as he stated in one of his debates against the Gnostics. But although it does not
abruptly depart from his predecessors‘ ideas, it is new in many respects to the point that
19th century scholars linked Plotinus to the beginning of Neoplatonism.
What we know about Plotinus‘s life and his school is known through his
biography, The Life of Plotinus written by his pupil Porphyry. In this text, Porphyry
prepares the reader for understanding Plotinus‘s treatises and his peculiar silence about
his parents, race, and native land, something interpreted by Porphyry as indicating
Plotinus‘s disregard for the human body and the sensible realm. It is estimated that
Plotinus was born in Lycopolis, Egypt, in 204 or 205 CE, moved to Alexandria in his
twenties and discovered there his intellectual affinity. Guided by his teacher Ammonius
Sacca and motivated by the idea of becoming acquainted with Eastern philosophies,
Plotinus enlisted in the military expedition of Gordian III to Persia. The expedition failed
before he reached his goal, and he was forced to return to Rome where he spent the rest
of his life teaching and writing. Among his listeners were highly ranked officials, such as
Emperor Gallienus and Governor Rogatianus, who found that the cure for psychosomatic
problems merely required changing their way of life. It was in Rome that Plotinus began
writing philosophy and those writings were the reflection of his oral lectures, which
20 Plotinus, The Philosophy of Plotinus: Representative Books from the Enneads, ed. Sterling P.
Lamprecht. (Appleton-Century-Crofts, Inc., 1950), viii.
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imagined‖23, because there are two fundamental differences between them. One is a
difference in method and the other in focus. According to the former, while Plotinus
dedicated his life to teaching a doctrine, Plato wrote dialogues with the purpose of
confronting different philosophies with one another. Plotinus‘s dialectic becomes
―metaphysics.‖ That is, what is ―dynamic takes on the garb of fixity, though the breath of
mystical aspiration which dominates the Enneads confers its own powerful impulse upon
the whole.‖24
While Plato focused his concern on the reorganization of Athenian society,
Plotinus tried to disengage himself from earthly matters. But overall, Plotinus exerts a
major role in later interpretation of Plato, to the point that Ficino declares that Plato
speaks through the words of Plotinus. There are three critical points in Plato‘s doctrine
that are essential for Plotinus:
1. The clear distinction between the eternal realm and the temporal, between Ideas
and sensible things, and between the here and the beyond. These dichotomies are
characteristic of a relaxed dualism, contrasted with radical dualism, whether
Gnostic or Manichean. The same relaxed dualism reappears in the doctrine of
creation to ―achieve a fusion with the relaxed monism, different from pantheism,
of Semitic and Biblical thought.‖25
Plotinus does not emphasize the distinction
and opposition between the intelligible and the sensible world, which are bound
together by what he calls ‗participation‘. The intelligible realm is the realm of the
three hypostases; the One, Intellect or Nous, and Soul.
23 Plotinus, The Philosophy of Plotinus, x.
24Paul Henry, introduction to Enneads, Plotinus, trans. Stephen MacKenna, ( London: Oxford University
Press, 1954), xi.
25 Ibid.
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2. The Socratic idea of a soul that is immaterial and immortal. This idea, which was
not common to all the Greeks, isolates Plato, Aristotle, and Plotinus from the rest
of the Greek tradition. Plotinus, in his first treatise On Beauty, one of the most
striking and widely read, follows Plato in placing the essence of beauty not in
symmetry but in a non-material principle, that is, in participation with the idea of
beauty in the intelligible realm. Thus, this kind of idealism becomes a feature of
his relaxed dualism. In On the Immortality of the Soul, he attacks the Stoics,
Pythagoras‘s view of the soul as harmony, and Aristotle‘s view of the soul as a
body‘s form or entelechy, and emphasizes the distinction between the spiritual
and the physical realms. Plotinus shares with Plato the notions that the soul
survives death and that it is individual.
3. The idea of a transcendent God who is superior to the Ideas and to Being. Plotinus
finds the foundation for his idea of ‗negative theology‘ in the notion of the Good
in Plato‘s Republic and in the description of the absolute One in the Parmenides,
in which the Good is described as being above everything and in which the One
does not allow for any kind of multiplicity.
Plotinus‘s teachings and writings are so rich that they provided the foundation for the
Neoplatonic movement. While for his pupils he was a wise teacher, his interpretations of
Plato provoked a departure for the later representatives of the school, who embraced a
different position on the status and the ascendant movement of the universal soul.26
According to Plotinus, the ascent of the soul was attained through the use of reason,
allowing man to lift himself from sensible objects. This idea of intellectual training as
26 Pauliina Remes, 21.
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means of purification classifies Plotinus‘s thought as non-humanistic, because the type of
immortality he attributes to the human soul is independent from its deeds in the empirical
world. This position conflicted with Christianity, which did not see much value in the
wisdom of the Greeks for the attaining of salvation, since it contradicted the Christian
idea of salvation after death.
To fully understand Plotinus‘s idea on the ascent of the soul, one must consider
his ethical aim, which is neither Platonic, Aristotelian, Stoic, nor Epicurean. Plotinus
does not emphasize changing the empirical world because, in terms of his metaphysics,
he has already affirmed the existence of an intelligible world.
27
Humanity can transcend
its worldly circumstances through thought. But, the kind of intellectual activity
advocated by Plotinus is not everyday intellectual activity. According to Plotinus,
―thought could be carried to the point of embracing the totality of existence [and] the true
objects of thought are not the things of sense but their ideal exemplars, the ‗forms‘ or
‗intelligibles‘ of whose unchanging beauty we sometimes get a glimpse in some beautiful
object.‖28 For him, however, intelligence is not the ultimate reality, since knowledge
implies a desire for what we do not have, and what we lack is a state of unity with the
One. In order to achieve this inner experience, it is vital that the soul break away from the
body and return upon itself. ―In the equation between contemplation and action lies the
very center of Plotinus‘s metaphysics.‖29
This inward movement, so characteristic of
Neoplatonism but also of Gnosticism and Christianity, shows Plotinus as closer to Plato
27 Plotinus, The Philosophy of Plotinus, xxii.
28 Ibid., xxiii.
29 Paul Henry, xlii.
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than to Aristotle. This is because Plotinus‘s metaphysics is closer to meta-psychology,
and his theodicy departs from Aristotle‘s views of the movement of the spheres towards
the unmoved mover to the satisfaction of the soul‘s desire for unity, that only the One can
gratify. In Plotinus, the starting point of movement is Soul, not nature. The soul travels,
through the power of dialectic, back to the Intellect and, through a process of purification,
to the One. Since Plotinus does not take into consideration the ideas of sin or salvation,
he does not consider the soul as being in opposition to sin, and he criticizes the idea of
man as ―the centre of the universe and the subject of redemption.‖30
Although Plotinus‘s theory is not systematic, it brilliantly synthesizes the
religious and philosophical problems of the soul, of the world, and of its rational
justification. His theology fuses the cosmos and the soul and, without departing from
rationality, he is able to incorporate mysticism in his philosophical approach to these
problems.
The Three Primary Hypostases ( Enneads V. 1)
Porphyry placed The Three Primary Hypostases, one of the most important and
revealing of the treatises, at the beginning of what is considered the ‗theological‘
Ennead 31. It not only reflects the unbreakable unity of personal spiritual life and
metaphysical reflection that is typical of Plotinian theology, but it is also the most cited
after ―Eusebius of Caesarea, by Basil and Augustine, Ciryl and Theodoret.‖32
As is
30 Paul Henry, xliii.
31 Ibid., xliv.
32 Ibid.
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How? Explain a little more.
You know that, when we turn our eyes to things whose colors are not longer in
the light of the day but in the gloom of night, the eyes are dimmed and seem
nearly blind, as if clear vision were no longer in them.
Of course.
Yet whenever one turns them on things illuminated by the sun, they see clearly,
and vision appears in those very same eyes?
Indeed.
Well, understand the soul in the same way: When it focuses on something
illuminated by truth and what is, it understands, knows, and apparently possesses
understanding, but when it focuses on what is mixed with obscurity, on what
comes to be and passes away, it opines and is dimmed, changes its opinions this
way and that, and seems bereft of understanding.
It does seem that way.
So what gives truth to the things known and the power to know to the knower is
the form of the good. And though it is the cause of knowledge and truth, it is also
an object of knowledge. Both knowledge and truth are beautiful things, but the
good is other and more beautiful than they. In the visible realm, light and sight are
rightly considered sunlike, but it is wrong to think that they are the sun, so here it
is right to think of knowledge and truth as godlike but wrong to think that either
of them is the good —for the good is more prized. …
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‗World Soul‘, is nourished by the Intellect and serves as a guide. The other that is lower
is called ‗Individual Soul‘. But both halves have the same rank. Even though soul
animates all things and is present in every single point of mass, the World Soul remains
whole and present in its totality, resembling the Intellect from which it obtained its
indivisibility and omnipresence. Its power makes possible a world of plurality contained
within the ties of unity and its presence makes the world divine. We are divine because
our soul is of the same kind as the World Soul, which gives life to the deities. As Plotinus
states:
Let look at the great soul, being itself another soul which is no small one, which
has become worthy to look by being freed from deceit and the things that have
bewitched the other souls, and is established in quietude. … … Into this heaven at
rest let it imagine soul as if flowing in from outside, pouring in and entering it
everywhere and illuminating it: as the rays of the sun light up a dark cloud, and
make it shine and give it immortality and wakes what lies inert. … … For soul
has given itself to the whole magnitude of heaven, as far as it extends, and every
stretch of space, both great and small, is ensouled; one body lies in one place and
one in another, and one is here and another there; some are separated by being in
opposite parts of the universe, and others in other ways. But soul is not like this
and it is not by being cut up that gives life, by a part of itself for each individual
thing, but all things live by the whole, and all soul is present everywhere, made
like to the father who begat it in its unity and universality.43
43 Plotinus, Enneads, trans. by A. H. Armstrong, V.1.2.4-23; 31-40, 17.
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Without soul we are only earth, just as the fire is nothing without the principle that ignites
its flames. Therefore, if it is the soul that calls our attention then, rather than seeking it in
others, we should seek it in ourselves, although ―by admiring the soul in another, you
admire yourself.‖44
Because Soul has a divine character, it can help us to reach divinity or pure unity,
ascending with the help of its power. According to Plotinus, we as human beings
―will not look far; and the stages between are not many.‖45
That which will guide us
during the ascension towards union with the One is the upper part of the soul, its more
divine part, which is an image of the Intellect from which it proceeds. Just as the spoken
word is the image of the word of the soul, the soul is the image of the word or reason of
Intellect and of that segment of its activity by which life is produced in another level or
reality.46 Plotinus compares this phase of the Intellect‘s activity to fire, which holds heat
as part of its essence but also radiates it outwardly, although ―the activity on the level of
Intellect does not flow out of it, but the external activity comes into existence as
something distinct.‖47 Because Soul proceeds from Intellect, it has intellectual existence,
manifested by its discursive reasoning, and some degree of perfection that is never equal
to its predecessor. When Soul establishes itself in the sensible world, it never departs
from Intellect since it only finds its actualization in the continuous contemplation of the
Intellect. Therefore, Intellect makes Soul divine by being its progenitor and by being part
44
Plotinus, Enneads, trans. by A. H. Armstrong, V.1.2.5, 19.
45 Ibid., V.1.3.5, 19.
46 Ibid., V.1.3.10-15, 21.
47 Ibid.,V.1.3.13, 21.
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of it. These internal and intellectual activities of the soul are active and superior
compared to the inferior activities, of foreign origin, which are passive. The only thing
that separates Soul and Intellect is their nature. As matter is to form, Soul is to Intellect,
the recipient of a simple intellectual form not composed by parts. Although Soul
possesses great excellence, Intellect is superior to it. Plotinus explains that it is normal for
soul to try to transcend the sensible realm and to observe the ―pure Intellect presiding
over [it], and immense wisdom, and the true life of Kronos, a god who is fullness and
intellect. For he encompasses in himself all things immortal, every intellect, every god,
every soul, all for ever unmoving.‖
48
Intellect
Plotinus describes the Intellect as a superior reality that embraces all immortal
beings, all intelligence, divinity, and soul. Since it does not have a future or a past and it
does not change due to its perfection, it is eternal and immutable and all the things in it
are perfect and remain identical with themselves, satisfied with their present condition.
Therefore, it lacks nothing and its state of harmony is not contingent on anything else. In
contrast with Soul, whose action is always divided by the different objects it tries to
animate, Intellect remains unchanged because all the things it contains are perfect,
―having nothing which is not so, having nothing in itself which does not think; but it
thinks not by seeking but by having.‖49
This reflects Plotinus‘s idea that knowledge
48 Plotinus, Enneads, trans. by A. H. Armstrong, V.1.4.6-10, 23.
49 Ibid., V.1.4.15, 23.
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implies a want or a lack. For him, knowledge is not a possession but a desire to obtain
something we do not have.
Each thing contained by Intellect is both Intellect and Being, since the cause of
thinking is also the cause of Being. Intellect gives existence to Being in thinking it and
Being, as the object of thought, provides Intellect with its thinking and its existence.
But the cause of thinking is something else, which is also the cause of being; they
both therefore have a cause other than themselves. For they are simultaneous and
exist together and one does not abandon the other, but this one is two things,
Intellect and Being and thinking and thought, Intellect as thinking and Being as
thought. For there could not be thinking without otherness, and also sameness.
These then are primary, Intellect, Being, Otherness, Sameness; but one must
include Motion and Rest.50
The activity of thought implies difference as well as identity. Thus, it is important to
consider other terms beside Intellect and Being, terms such as Identity or Sameness that
describe the unity of Intellect, Difference or Otherness that explain the difference
between the thought and its object, Motion or Movement that are part of the thinking
process, and Rest that results from sameness. The multiplicity of objects or forms creates
number and quantity, while the individual characteristics of each create quality, ―and
from these as principles everything else comes.‖51
The reality of the Intellect is multiple,
and the soul lives in it until it decides to separate and descend to the sensible realm as a
giver of life. But when it comes closer to Intellect and becomes one with it, it has the
50 Plotinus, Enneads, trans. by A. H. Armstrong, V.1.4.30-36, 25.
51 Ibid., V.1.4.44, 25.
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desire to seek knowledge of that which has begotten Intellect, the perfect unity that is also
the cause of Number. Because Number is not primary and dyad is secondary, the cause of
this must be a Being whose simplicity and unity precedes multiplicity and is the cause of
their existence as a manifold. The dyad is indefinite in itself but, when it becomes
determinate, it becomes Number, which is substance. Therefore, soul is also number,
because only things without mass or extension belong to the higher levels of the
hierarchy. The things that the senses experience as real are ranked as inferior. Plotinus
exemplifies this concept by comparing it with a seed, the value of which does not reside
in its observable properties but in the importance of the unseen, which are Number and
the seminal reasons.52 According to Plotinus:
what is called number in the intelligible world and the dyad are rational principles
and Intellect; but the dyad is indefinite when one forms an idea of it by what may
be called the substrate, but each and every number which comes from it and the
One is a form, as if intellect was shaped by the numbers which came to exist in it;
but it is shaped in one way by the One and in another by itself, like sight in its
actuality; for intellection is seeing sight, and both are one.53
The One
Before discussing the One, Plotinus invokes us to reach out with our souls and
pray to the One in quiet solitude, so that we can observe God resting alone as in an inner
sanctuary in which he remains undisturbed and removed from all things. To accomplish
52 Plotinus, The Philosophy of Plotinus, 14.
53 Plotinus, Enneads, trans. by A. H. Armstrong, V.1.5.15-19, 29.
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this, we must first observe all those objects that resemble the images surrounding the
sanctuary or simply the image that first emerged and the principle by which it appears.
―Everything which is moved must have some end to which it moves.‖54 The One,
according to Plotinus, differentiates itself from everything else by not having an end or
telos. Therefore, it does not need to move towards such an end and that which it generates
is generated without motion on its part. The One creates the secondary hypostases below
it without volition or movement, because the One is akin to an energy that overflows
without exhausting itself, like the ―light of the sun which, so to speak, runs around it,
springing from it continually while it remains unchanged.‖
55
All things, during their
existence, necessarily generate from their own substance some further existence, which
depends on their power. This new reality resembles the image of its genitor. Therefore,
everything that possesses this kind of perfection is productive and, because the One is
complete perfection, its production is eternal. However, that which it produces is not as
perfect as itself and perfection diminishes further with each lower level that is produced.
According to Plotinus, the Intellect, emanated from the One, contemplates and needs the
One for its existence, though the One does not need Intellect. The Soul, which is an
emanation of Intellect, depends on it as a derivation of Intellect‘s activity and dir ects
itself to Intellect, just as Intellect contemplates the One. Therefore, as there is nothing
between Intellect and the One, there is nothing between Soul and Intellect. The only
separation between the begetter and the begotten is the difference between them. When
Plotinus calls Intellect the image of the One, he implies that Intellect retains some of the
54 Plotinus, Enneads, trans. by A. H. Armstrong, V.1.6.17, 29.
55 Ibid., V.1.6.31, 31.
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attributes of the One, but it is not the One. Thus, he raises the question of how the One
gives origin to Intellect. According to Plotinus, it is by ―its return that it sees; and this
seeing is Intellect.‖56 Plotinus did not believe that the One returns upon itself and sees
itself ―as the unity-in-multiplicity which is Intellect‖57
because, in his account, there is no
division or multiplicity in the One since it is perfect unity. ―Intellect, certainly, by its own
means even defines its being for itself by the power which comes from the One, and
because its substance is a kind of single part of what belongs to the One and comes from
the One, it is strengthened by the One and made perfect in substantial existence by and
from it.‖
58
Therefore, Intellect is characterized by multiplicity, has in itself the power to
generate and to characterize Being out of itself, is of pure origin, and includes in itself the
whole of being, all the beauties of ideas, and all the intelligible deities, without letting
them descend into matter. It is this Intellect that, out of its perfection, generates Soul, the
last hypostasis of the divine sphere.
The One and the Theory of Emanation
Plotinus‘s philosophy embraces two ideas that imply and represent two
movements. One movement is downward from perfect unity to multiplicity, and the other
movement is an upward journey away from multiplicity and towards the perfect unity of
the One. The first movement is justified by the hierarchical organization of living reality
or hierarchy of Being, which proceeds eternally from its transcendent First Principle, the
One, and descends in an uninterrupted chain of levels from the Divine Intellect and the
56 Plotinus, Enneads, trans. by A. H. Armstrong, V.1.7.7, 35.
57 Ibid., footnote, 34.
58 Ibid., V.1.7.12-16, 37.
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Forms to the Soul and to the last reality, Matter. The ascendant movement can be
achieved as a result of the Soul‘s desire to abandon the sensible realm and by a process of
gradual purification, to achieve union with the object of desire, that is, the One. The
theory of emanation explains the origin of this hierarchy. Plotinus, taking into account the
principle of prior simplicity, believes that all things must be originated by one single
source. This principle postulates that ―every composite thing depends and derives in
some way from what is not composite, what is simple.‖59
Plotinus applies this principle
with a rigor that distances him from Aristotle and brings him closer to Plato and such
Platonists as Alcinous, who states that divine intellect cannot be simple because, although
it has a high degree of unity, it is still a composite. Therefore, for Plotinus, there must be
something prior to divine intellect, something that represents perfect unity. ―But it must
be single, if it is to be seen in others. Unless one were to say that it has its existence by
being with others. But then it will not be simple, nor will what is made up of many parts
exist. For what is not capable of being simple will not exist, and if there is no simple,
what is made up of many parts will not exist.‖60 Plotinus, in this passage, emphasizes a
duality that will be characteristic of the natures of Intellect and Soul. Both have dual
natures, one as part of the whole and the other in itself, outside of the whole. As well, that
which is prior to multiplicity must be superior in power and in being, since it produces
the complex and displays unity, independence, and self-integrity.61
60 Plotinus, Enneads, V.6.3.10-15, quoted in Dominic J. O‘Meara, Plotinus: An Introduction to the
Enneads, (New York: Oxford University Press, Inc., 1993), 46.
60 Dominic J. O‘Meara, Plotinus: An Introduction to the Enneads, (New York: Oxford University Press,
Inc., 1993), 44.
61Ibid., 49.
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numerous Forms. For humanity, Intellect represents our higher level of perceptive
thought, which grasps its object without the need for reason. At this highest stage, we
become Soul, which is formed as an image of the Intellect.
The Soul in Plotinus is very similar to that in Plato. It serves as a liaison between
the intelligible and the sensible realms, representing the former in the latter. Soul is
derived from Intellect and returns to it through contemplation, as the Intellect returns to
the One. However, its relationship to Intellect is much closer than that of Intellect to the
One because, at its maximum state, Soul belongs to Intellect. The Soul is constituted by
two parts or levels, the higher level where it performs as ―a transcendent principle of
form, order, and intelligent direction and the lower where it operates as an immanent
principle of life and growth‖65
in what Plotinus called Nature. The lower soul is
connected to the higher soul, as the higher soul is connected to Intellect, through
contemplation. But, since Nature belongs to the sensible realm, the contemplation of the
lower realm is so weak that what it produces ―is the immanent forms in body, which are
non-contemplative and so sterile, and below which lays only the darkness of matter.‖66
The soul, differently from Intellect, moves freely from one thing to another, causing
physical movement in space and time. It does not possess being as a whole but as
individual parts. The Plotinian soul has two characteristics that define its nature in terms
of its relationship to the material world. It organizes bodies and it is present in bodies. It
is rational, and it is both one and many. Our individual souls are simply parts of the
Universal Soul. Therefore, spiritually having the whole within them, they can turn to
65 Plotinus, Enneads, trans. by A. H. Armstrong, xxii.
66Ibid., xxiii.
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universality through contemplation, abandoning the bodies that they rule. The soul
divides itself when it enters the body without ceasing to be whole, because its unity is not
the same as the unity of body, which is the sum of its parts. The soul, being divisible and
indivisible at the same time, is not one in the sense of being continuous and the possessor
of different parts. It is divisible, because it is present in every part of the body that it
inhabits. But it is indivisible, because it is present as a whole in each part that constitutes
the body. This indicates the magnitude of the soul‘s power, which establishes it as a
divine entity that is situated at the privileged location between the superior, or
intelligible, realm and the sensible realm.
Nature, as Plotinus defines it in the Enneads, is part of the range of powers or
activities that are manifested by Soul. Thus, Nature is not a reality separated from Soul,
as Soul is separated from Intellect. It is an image produced by Soul, which does not work
on matter but creates without moving or changing because, in all production, ―there is
something which does not move or change, the form guiding the process, and since it is
in matter that change occurs and that visible shapes are generated in accord with this
form.‖67
For Plotinus, then, Nature as the formative principle of things is described as
contemplation, as an object of contemplation, and as a rational principle. ―For it is the
product of a contemplation that remains and does anything else, but makes in being
contemplation.‖68
It is a contemplation guided by superior principles in which things are
created in harmony with the nature of the maker. Nature contemplates Soul as Soul
contemplates Intellect. Nature‘s type of contemplation belongs to the lowest level in the
67 Dominic J. O‘Meara, 75.
68 Plotinus, Enneads, quoted in Dominic J. O‘Meara, Plotinus: An Introduction to the Enneads, 75.
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series of contemplations, in which contemplation manifests itself as derivation. Intellect
exists as a contemplation of the One, Soul exists as a contemplation of Intellect, and
Nature exists as contemplation of Soul. Therefore, everything derives from contemplation
and is contemplation. For Plotinus, the individual soul descends into a body in order to
fulfill the law of the universe and the plan of Universal Soul in its desire for expansion.
However, the spiritual state of the individual soul determines the degree of attachment to
the material world. The soul that is completely attached to the body and isolated from the
whole is trapped inside the body and is deviated from its higher destiny to rise from the
trivialities of the material world and ascend ―to the universality of transcendent Soul and
to the world of Intellect,‖69 towards perfect union with the One. Plotinus‘s work and
philosophy are captured in the following words: ―try to bring back the god in you to the
divine in the All.‖70
According to Plotinus, the material world, as an organic living form, is the best
imaginable representation of the realm of Forms within Intellect. These are fused together
―by a universal sympathy and harmony,‖71 in which evil and misery belong as part of a
greater design. Everything that is alive and has a form is good. But matter, which is the
last and lowest level of the One‘s derivation or emanation, constitutes the principle of
evil. For Plotinus, however, evil does not represent a positive form or spiritual entity in
the universe. It is, rather, a privation or lack of goodness that is inevitable as part of the
69 Plotinus, Enneads, trans. by A. H. Armstrong, xxiv.
70 Ibid., xxv.
71 Ibid., xxiv.
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material world, since the lowest emanation is also the one that is furthest removed from
the One‘s absolute perfection and unity.
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CHAPTER II
Neoplatonic Heritage and Pseudo-Dionysius
Platonic and Neoplatonic influences are very difficult to separate when studying
their roles in Western philosophy, because the Platonism present in medieval and
Renaissance thought is saturated by the Neoplatonic interpretations of Plato‘s work.
Therefore, it is important to study this Neoplatonic legacy as divided into two categories.
The first category is that of direct influence, in which the thinker includes in his writings
what he imported directly from the Neoplatonic source. The other category is that of
indirect influence, in which the thinker imports Neoplatonic ideas through intermediary
sources. Direct influence is the most prevalent but also more difficult to prove. In the
case of Neoplatonism, however, it is the most common form of influence. The
Neoplatonic heritage can be then divided ―into Plotinian, Athenian, and Alexandrian
strands of thought.‖72
The Plotinian branch is faithful to the Enneads, the Athenian
branch is characterized by its marked mysticism and embraces metaphysical and
theological ideas and concepts, and the Alexandrian branch is Neoplatonic but also
embraces Aristotelianism and, particularly, Aristotelian logic. The most influential
thinkers of this period were Marius Victorinus, the fourth century Christian rhetorician
and theorist who translated Greek Neoplatonism into Latin, Augustine of Hyppo (354-
430 CE), whose interpretation of Plato is close to Plotinus‘s and Porphyry‘s and who is
72 Pauliina Remes, 198.
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responsible for synthesizing the Christian faith with Platonic philosophy, and Boethius
(480-525 CE), who forms a strong link between antiquity and medieval philosophy in the
Latin West. Of the medieval philosophers, the most important Neoplatonists were
Johanes Scotus Eriugina (800-877), whose translations of Plato were employed by
Arabic philosophers, William of Moerbeke, who translated Proclus‘s Elements of
Theology and his commentaries of Parmenides and the Timaeus into Latin, and Meister
Eckhart (1260-1327), who retained the mystical side of Neoplatonism and adopted its
idea of negative theology.73
It is, however, in the Greek Christian world in which one finds the strongest
Neoplatonic influence, as exemplified in the ideas of Basil of Cesarea (330-379 CE),
Gregory of Nazianzen (329-390 CE), Gregory of Nyssa (d. 394CE) and, most
fundamentally, Dionysius the Areopagite, commonly known as Pseudo-Dionysius. While
Gregory of Nyssa followed the Plotinian branch of Neoplatonism, Pseudo-Dionysius
embraced Proclus‘s tradition. Proclus, who has been considered the ―great systematizer
of Neoplatonism,‖74 departed from some of Plotinus‘s beliefs and embraced Iamblicus‘s
idea of a more prolific ―supra-sensible realm.‖75
Confronted with the dilemma of how the
One can be both absolute and transcendent unity and imminent multiplicity in being, later
Neoplatonists took different approaches from that of Plotinus. While Iamblichus claims a
new entity above the One, which he calls the Ineffable, Proclus retains the One with its
transcendent and perfect attributes. But he also adds the Henads, a group of entities
73 Pauliina Remes, 199.
74 Ibid., 29.
75 Ibid., 28.
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located above the Forms that have the properties of being, in some way, transcendent and
unknowable, while being definable by and accessible to the human soul. Therefore, the
domain of the One is expanded by the Henads, which each act as the beginning of a chain
of entities, so that every entity below is subordinated to the One and to each of the
Henads. Basically, the Henads narrow the gap between the One and Being, but they do
not solve the problem presented by multiplicity. They function as the catalyst in the
process of unity becoming multiplicity and vice versa. They do not interparticipate as do
the Forms, and they are beyond thought and Being.76 The introduction of these new
hierarchies helped the later Neoplatonists to include a new system of divinities, which
were absent in Plotinus‘s hierarchy, and to create a system that was not only more
amenable to the mysticism and literature of the time but that also synthesized
metaphysics with traditional religion, thereby heightening the value of paganism in an
environment that was increasingly dominated by Christianity.
Neoplatonism left a strong legacy for the development of the philosophy of
religion, with regard to issues concerning God and the immortality of the soul. With
respect to the issue of God, three important factors should be considered:
1. The idea of the One as the unity of being, truth, and happiness is transformed into
the notion of a God who maintains these threefold characteristics but also
differentiates Himself through direct creation. Truth is endowed to the world as
part of the creation, rather than as a thought within the divine Intellect. As in
Neoplatonism, happiness is understood as a form of bliss, a product of the union
with the Creator, who represents order, goodness, and beauty.
76 Pauliina Remes, 74.
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2. The doctrine of emanation from the creator appears first in August ine‘s On the
Trinity. The triadic nature of the power of the Neoplatonic God, which has
internal activity or rest, external activity or movement, and the ability to return
back to the creator proved very influential on Christian thinkers such as Gregory
of Nyssa, Pseudo-Dionysius, Maximus the Confessor, and Thomas Aquinas in
their interpretation of cosmic theology and creation. ―It became interpreted as the
distinction between ousia (substance), dunamis (power or potentiality) and
energia (activity).‖77 According to Christianity, God creates through an act of
will. God makes Himself known through His creation, and the idea of the divinity
regressing to Himself through His creation is manifested in one of the pillars of
Christian faith, that is, the idea of a transcendent God who creates the universe
and the return of man to God through salvation.
3. The theory of negative or apophatic theology, elaborated first by Plotinus in his
definition of the ineffable One and which defines God by what He is not,
influenced the Cappadocian Fathers, Maximus the Confessor, and Pseudo-
Dionysius who adopted the via apophatica, thus differentiating themselves from
thinkers in Latin West who adopted the via cataphatica, defining God in positive
terms.
Although the Neoplatonic idea of the immortality of the soul is rooted in Plato and the
idea of the soul as a divine intellectual entity is shared with other ancient philosophers,
the most particular aspects of the Neoplatonic conception of the soul are its two
movements: The ability to descend and separate from its creator and its desire to return to
77 Pauliina Remes, 204.
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its origin through purification. The later Neoplatonists decided to remove divinity from
the soul, so that human beings would have their own nature and their own place in the
creation. This idea fits with the Christian assumption that the soul is not able to reach the
level of the transcendent God. However, they maintained the ability of the soul to ascend,
through the practice of virtues and the purification from sin. The union of the soul with
its creator is no longer achieved through its own desire, as Plotinus had stipulated, but by
the grace of God.
The historical importance of Pseudo-Dionysius rests both on the fact that ―his
doctrine is the first Christian version of a type of Neoplatonic philosophy taught mainly
at two centers of learning, Athens and Alexandria, from approximately the fourth to the
sixth century A.D.‖78
and on the fact that he is responsible for transmitting the tenets of
ancient philosophy to many influential thinkers of the Byzantine world. Pseudo-
Dionysius is an enigmatic author whose treatises are difficult to decipher and whose
thought includes themes such as ―the hierarchical vision of the world, the approach to
God and the different ways of naming him, the correlative presentation of the divinizing
intelligences, and the treatment of symbols.‖79
Although several theories were developed
regarding his real identity, none of these has been conclusive. What we know about
Pseudo-Dionysius we know through his works, which appeared bearing his name around
500 A.D., in Syria, and were immediately embraced by other thinkers. His works,
referred to as the Corpus Aeropagiticum, consist of four treatises and ten letters. The first
78 Stephen Gersh, From Iamblichus to Eriugena: an investigation of the prehistory and evolution of the
pseudo-Dionysian tradition, (Leiden: Brill, 1978) , 1.
79 Pseudo-Dionysius, the Aeropagite, Pseudo-Dionysius: The Complete Works, trans. by Colm Luibheid, Mahwah, (New Jersey: Paulist Press, 1987), 5.
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enormous anthology of The Corpus Aeropagiticum made possible its evaluation by later
Latin translators, including Marsilio Ficino reinforcing the notion that Pseudo-
Dionysius‘s spirituality has been better received and more influential in the West than in
the East, where Augustine had been more influential. According to Jaroslav Pelikan, ―the
most fascinating aspect of the westward odyssey of Dionysian spirituality is the
interaction between the Neoplatonism of Dionysius and the Neoplatonism of Augustine.
Each had a distinctive metaphysics; but more importantly, each was the fountainhead for
a distinctive piety and devotion.‖82
Pseudo-Dionysius‘s metaphysics of creation claims of God ―that he is all, that he
is no thing‖83and is the cause of everything. ―It is the cause of all beings, but itself
nothing, as transcending all things in a manner beyond being…But since…it is the cause
of all beings, the beneficent providence of the Thearchy is hymned from all the effects.‖84
When Pseudo-Dionysius refers to God as cause, he does not mean this as ‗first cause‘ or
Supreme Being. Rather, he means this in the sense that everything that exists is God‘s
effect. In this sense, Pseudo-Dionysius remains loyal to the Neoplatonic idea of causation
as vertical, in which a lower ontological level is the effect of a higher level.85
As already
mentioned, Pseudo-Dionysius‘s influence derives from Proclus who, on the subject of
causation, differs from both Plato and Plotinus. This is because his doctrine of causation
departs from the dual relation between the ‗participated‘ term that involves the
82
Pseudo-Dionysius, 24.
83 Pseudo-Dionysius, On Divine Names, I.2, 596C.
84 Ibid., On Divine Names, I.5, 593C-D.
85 Eric Pearl, Theophany: The Neoplatonic Philosophy of Dionysius the Aeropagite, (Albany: State of NewYork Press, 2007), 17.
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individuated properties and the ‗unparticipated‘ term that represents perfect unity and
does not belong to anything. Proclus‘s doctrine embraces a three-term relation that
includes the participated, the participant, and the unparticipated. The purpose of this
division is not to keep the participants alienated from the unparticipated but to assert
God‘s presence in all of them. Thus, ―the cause is separated in the sense that it is not
conditioned by its effects, not in the sense that it is not present to or immanent in them.
The unparticipated term, then, is simply a universal determination considered as one and
the same and hence transcendent to its instances; while the participated terms are the
same determination considered as differently present in each instance.‖
86
Thus, in the
doctrine of creation as manifestation, the effect is contained in the cause and, regardless
of the number of levels or triadic subdivisions, the creation represents the differentiation
of the One.
According to Pseudo-Dionysius, God is ―the source of all holy enlightenment, a
Source which has told us about itself in the holy words of scripture, the cause of
everything that is origin, being, and life. … It is the Life of the living, the being of
beings, it is the Source and the cause of all life and of all being, for out of its goodness it
commands all things to be and it keeps them going.‖87
The manifestation of God in all
things created is what Pseudo-Dionysius refers to as ―powers, participations, processions,
providences, manifestations, or distributions of God.‖88
His God is both transcendent and
immanent. It is transcendent because it is not a being at all and is not part of reality.
86 Eric Perl, 24.
87 Pseudo-Dionysius, On Divine Names, I.3 589B-C.
88 Eric Perl, 29.
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However, it is immanent because it is present in each one of the things created. In this
account, using Plotinus‘s metaphor of the One as source of light that is not itself
illuminated, Pseudo-Dionysius‘s God is the being in which all beings participate, but It is
not one of these beings. Thus God, as light or illumination, both transcends and
permeates from the higher and most revered level to the lowest. When he calls God ―the
Different‖ in On Divine Names, Pseudo-Dionysius tries to explain God‘s divine
difference as God‘s ―unitary multiplication and the uniform processions of his multiple-
generation to all things.‖89 For Plotinus, Proclus, and Pseudo-Dionysius, God is simple
and unified, in which all the differentiated beings become one undifferentiated entity that
contains everything but also has the power to unfurl and multiply in different beings.
Therefore, the whole of reality is the appearance or occurrence of God. It is theophany. It
is the presence of God in the content of any being in a distinctive finite way, endowing
such a being with the gift of intellect and transforming it into a representation of God.
―For to be present means to be given or available to thought, i.e. to be intelligible. And as
intelligible, as given to thought, God is apparent, or manifest, in and as the being.‖90 This
idea of being as theophany, in Pseudo-Dionysius, is a response to the Neoplatonic idea
that being belongs to the intelligible realm.
At this point it is important to clarify what it means for God to appear in reality, in
order to truly grasp the doctrine of being as theophany. This is because referring to God
as a mere appearance could lead to a reduction of God to a mere thing or object of
thought. This would remove all divine attributes from God and would consider God as
89 Eric Perl, 31.
90 Ibid., 32.
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just another member of reality. But since God is not just another thing but is the sum of
all things, God is beyond being.
It is the supra-being beyond every being. It sets the boundaries of all sources and
orders and yet it is rooted above every source and order. It is the measure of all
things. It is eternity and is above and prior to eternity. It is abundance where there
is want and superabundance where there is plenty. It is inexpressible and
ineffable, and it transcends mind, life, and being. It is the supernatural. It is the
transcendent possessor of transcendence.91
Pseudo-Dionysius, in On Divine Names, elaborates his own notion of reality, as
hierarchic and triadic, based on the Platonic and Neoplatonic models of three classes,
three stages, and three functions. Therefore, his angelic universe, which corresponds to
the Plotinian intelligible realm, is constituted by three triads, each divided into three
orders, each of which is branched into three levels of intelligences, each one belonging to
the threefold arrangement. In every single triadic cluster, perfection belongs to the first
element, illumination to the second, and purification to the last.92 The angelic and the
human realms are parts of a dualistic universe, which ―constitutes a sacred order, an
understanding, and an activity, all regulated by the law of hierarchical mediations, both in
the sense of the descent of divine illumination and in that of the ascent of divinization.‖93
The stability and synchronization of each of the parts and of the whole depend on
occupying their proper place and function. In part, this is possible because Pseudo-
91 Pseudo-Dionysius, On Divine Names, II.10, 648C-D.
92 Pseudo-Dionysius, 5.
93 Ibid., 6.
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Dionysius only includes the divine in his hierarchy. Thus, the steadiness, the dynamism,
and the effectiveness of his hierarchy is totally dependent on the creator, which is both
the origin and the final desire of all divinization. It is through this approach that Pseudo-
Dionysius reaches the idea of God, whose divine name maybe either of biblical or of
philosophical origin, since all these names imply the paradoxical idea that God reveals
itself in the creation but nobody has ever seen it. Therefore, God could be the recipient of
numerous names or could continue without a name, because God is above everything that
can be named. From the perspective of the process of creation, it is possible to name God
based on its work by adopting affirmative or cataphatic theology. But, from the
perspective of the divine ascent or return, God will not bare a name, as affirmed in the
negative or apophatic theology. The divine names that Pseudo-Dionysius introduces in
On Divine Names, are Good, Being, Life, and Wisdom. Arranged in a hierarchical mode,
each one of these names represents the manner in which God is present in the different
classes of beings: matter, plants, irrational living beings, rational living beings, and
intelligible beings. The last three of these, considered cognitive beings, are ―participants
in God as Wisdom.‖94
The divine name ―Good‖ tells of all the processions of the universal Cause; it
extends to beings and nonbeings and that Cause is superior to being and
nonbeings. The name ―Being‖ extends to all beings which are, and it is beyond
them. The name of ―Life‖ extends to all living things, and yet is beyond them.
94 Eric Perl, 65.
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The name ―Wisdom‖ reaches out to everything which has to do with
understanding, reason, and sense perception, and surpasses them all.95
I do not think of the Good as one thing, Being as another, Life and Wisdom as yet
other, and I do not claim that there are numerous causes and different Godheads,
all differently ranked, superior and inferior, and all producing different effects.
No. But I hold that there is one God for all these good processions and that he is
possessor of the divine names of which I speak and that the first name tells of the
universal Providence of the one God, while the other names reveal general or
specific ways in which he acts providentially.
96
Therefore, the divine processions, as Pseudo-Dionysius called them, are organized by
taking into account the extent of universality by which each is present in different beings.
The divine order is established by placing the Goodness of God at the apex, followed by
Being, Life and, at last, Wisdom. Following Proclus, Pseudo-Dionysius situates Being as
prior to Life, because Being, Life, and Intellect participate, in that order, in the
intelligible realm. All of these are below the Good, which is itself beyond Being. While
Proclus‘s thought implies the existence of several gods of different types and ranks,
Pseudo-Dionysius discards this position, arguing that his ranks are not substances or
hypostases located between God and his creation but are the different ways in which God
makes itself present in its creation. This rejection of polytheism illustrates the process of
Christianization that Pseudo-Dionysius is experiencing. The disparity between Proclus
and Pseudo-Dionysius, however, is more rooted in what concerns religious practices than
95 Pseudo-Dionysius, On Divine Names, V.1, 816B.
96 Ibid., On Divine Names, V.1, 816C-D.
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in metaphysics, because both sustain the idea that the universe is filled and constituted
―by a multiplicity of divine powers at work differently in different things, all of which are
presences or manifestations of the One, or God.‖97
According to Pseudo-Dionysius, both beings and nonbeings participate in God as
the Good, identifying nonbeings with matter, which does not have form but constitutes
the substratum of every other being capable of receiving or possessing forms. Therefore,
matter takes its origin from the Good. Inanimate objects are produced by the Good and
Being. Plants are produced by the Good, Being, and Life. Animals are produced by the
Good, Being, Life and Wisdom. Within this arrangement, the more universal encloses the
less universal, so that Being is above Life because Life is a specification of Being and
Life is above Wisdom because Wisdom is a specification of Life. As intellection is the
highest form of consciousness, intelligible beings possess the higher modes of Life and
Being. These celestial beings or angels, mentioned in On Divine Names and the
Ecclesiastical Hierarchy, are considered to represent the most perfect level in the
hierarchy because they are closer to God.
Divine intelligences do exist in a manner superior to other beings and they live in
a fashion surpassing other living things. They have understanding and they have
knowledge far beyond perception and reason. They desire and participate in the
beautiful and the Good in a way far above the things which exist. They are very
much closer to the Good and participate much more in the Good, from which they
have received more and certainly greater gifts. … The more a thing participates in
97 Eric Perl, 68.
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the one infinitely generous God, the closer one is to him and the more divine one
is with respect to others.98
The Good then is present in all things according to their rank, as it shines through them.
―These illuminations are the participated determinations of creatures, and they are
analogous to each in that each being participates in God in the manner appropriate to and
constitutive of that being.‖99
In the Celestial Hierarchy, Pseudo-Dionysius makes clear that although the
activity of each level in the hierarchy represents the presence of God according to that
level, the activity of the lower level is similar to that of the higher but in a lesser manner.
Therefore, when Pseudo-Dionysius states that the higher beings are closer to God, he
does not mean that they are between God and the lower beings. Rather, he means that
God is not present in all things equally but in a just proportion. Pseudo-Dionysius departs
from the Neoplatonic idea that each level causes the one below it and postulates that only
―cognitive illumination and not being is transmitted through the created hierarchy.‖100
Each being in the hierarchy part icipates in God according to its desire to fulfill the role of
its proper position in relation to other beings above or below, exercising its activities, not
individually but in constant relation to the other beings. ―Therefore, when the hierarchic
order lays it on some to be purified and on others to do the purifying, on some to receive
illumination and on others to cause illumination, on some to be perfected and on others to
bring about perfection, each will actually imitate God in the way suitable to whatever role
98 Pseudo-Dionysius, On Divine Names, V.3, 817B.
99 Eric Perl, 71.
100 Ibid., 73.
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it has.‖101 The purpose of the hierarchy, then, is for beings to become like God and to be
united to God. Its core principle is what Pseudo-Dionysius calls immediate mediation, the
hierarchical mediation of beings by which God constitutes them through his presence.
Pseudo-Dionysius‘s influence on Scholastic theology became noticeable during
the twelfth century and continued through the thirteenth century, when monks of the
Franciscan and Dominican orders translated and commented on his works. Thomas
Aquinas discussed some of his treatises and Saint Bonaventure considered him the
―prince of mystics.‖102 In the sixteenth century, no other writings of the early Christian
era received similar attention in terms of translations, excerpts, commentaries, and even
cumulative corpora, with the exception of the Bible and the works of Boethius.103
As mentioned above, Pseudo-Dionysius‘s ideas influenced not only medieval
mystical thought but also Scholastic theology. His ―apostolic authority was supported by
Hilduin‘s conflation of three Dionysii: the Areopagite, the first bishop of Paris, and the
author of the corpus‖104
within Roman traditionalism. However, after being discredited
by the humanist Lorenzo Valla, Pseudo-Dionysius and his writings lost credibility with
Protestant thinkers. The different inclinations towards and interest in the study of the
Dionysian corpus during the fifteenth century within some humanist circles continued in
the next century among Protestant and Catholic scholars. The relationship of humanism
to Dionysian thought was significant. The humanists‘ philological interest in reading
101 Pseudo-Dionysius, On Celestial Hierarchy, III.2, 165B-C.
102 Ibid., 29.
103 Ibid., 33.
104 Ibid., 32.
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ancient texts and translating them into Latin improved the condition of Greek texts and
made it possible to have greater access to the Dionysian corpus. Humanistic pedagogy
rejected Scholastic logicism and intellectualism and embraced Pseudo-Dionysius‘s idea
that Christian learning and contemplation imply one another, promoting the concept that
the study of the liberal arts, accompanied by deep contemplation, were the remedies for
the ills of the time.105
For