Ennead I
Ninth tractate: The reasoned dismissal
Written by Plotinus, 250 AD
- "You will not dismiss your Soul lest it go forth..." [taking
something with it].
- For wheresoever it go, it will be in some definite condition, and its
going forth is to some new place. The Soul will wait for the body to be
completely severed from it; then it makes no departure; it simply finds itself
free.
- But how does the body come to be separated?
- The separation takes place when nothing of Soul remains bound up with
it: the harmony within the body, by virtue of which the Soul was retained, is
broken and it can no longer hold its guest.
- But when a man contrives the dissolution of the body, it is he that
has used violence and torn himself away, not the body that has let the Soul
slip from it. And in loosing the bond he has not been without passion; there
has been revolt or grief or anger, movements which it is unlawful to indulge.
- But if a man feel himself to be losing his reason?
- That is not likely in the Sage, but if it should occur, it must be
classed with the inevitable, to be welcome at the bidding of the fact though
not for its own sake. To call upon drugs to the release of the Soul seems a
strange way of assisting its purposes.
- And if there be a period allotted to all by fate, to anticipate the
hour could not be a happy act, unless, as we have indicated, under stern
necessity.
- If everyone is to hold in the other world a standing determined by
the state in which he quitted this, there must be no withdrawal as long as
there is any hope of progress.
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