Ennead I
Seventh tractate: On the primal good and secondary forms
of good [otherwise, on happiness]
Written by Plotinus, 250 AD
- 1. We can scarcely conceive that for any entity the Good can be other
than the natural Act expressing its life-force, or in the case of an entity
made up of parts the Act, appropriate, natural and complete, expressive of that
in it which is best.
- For the Soul, then, the Good is its own natural Act.
- But the Soul itself is natively a "Best"; if, further, its act be
directed towards the Best, the achievement is not merely the "Soul's good" but
"The Good" without qualification.
- Now, given an Existent which- as being itself the best of existences
and even transcending the existences- directs its Act towards no other, but is
the object to which the Act of all else is directed, it is clear that this must
be at once the Good and the means through which all else may participate in
Good.
- This Absolute Good other entities may possess in two ways- by
becoming like to It and by directing the Act of their being towards It.
- Now, if all aspiration and Act whatsoever are directed towards the
Good, it follows that the Essential-Good neither need nor can look outside
itself or aspire to anything other than itself: it can but remain unmoved, as
being, in the constitution of things, the wellspring and firstcause of all Act:
whatsoever in other entities is of the nature of Good cannot be due to any Act
of the Essential-Good upon them; it is for them on the contrary to act towards
their source and cause. The Good must, then, be the Good not by any Act, not
even by virtue of its Intellection, but by its very rest within Itself.
- Existing beyond and above Being, it must be beyond and above the
Intellectual-Principle and all Intellection.
- For, again, that only can be named the Good to which all is bound and
itself to none: for only thus is it veritably the object of all aspiration. It
must be unmoved, while all circles around it, as a circumference around a
centre from which all the radii proceed. Another example would be the sun,
central to the light which streams from it and is yet linked to it, or at least
is always about it, irremoveably; try all you will to separate the light from
the sun, or the sun from its light, for ever the light is in the sun.
- 2. But the Universe outside; how is it aligned towards the Good?
- The soulless by direction toward Soul: Soul towards the Good itself,
through the Intellectual-Principle.
- Everything has something of the Good, by virtue of possessing a
certain degree of unity and a certain degree of Existence and by participation
in Ideal-Form: to the extent of the Unity, Being, and Form which are present,
there is a sharing in an image, for the Unity and Existence in which there is
participation are no more than images of the Ideal-Form.
- With Soul it is different; the First-Soul, that which follows upon
the Intellectual-Principle, possesses a life nearer to the Verity and through
that Principle is of the nature of good; it will actually possess the Good if
it orientate itself towards the Intellectual-Principle, since this follows
immediately upon the Good.
- In sum, then, life is the Good to the living, and the
Intellectual-Principle to what is intellective; so that where there is life
with intellection there is a double contact with the Good.
- 3. But if life is a good, is there good for all that lives?
- No: in the vile, life limps: it is like the eye to the dim-sighted;
it fails of its task.
- But if the mingled strand of life is to us, though entwined with
evil, still in the total a good, must not death be an evil?
- Evil to What? There must be a subject for the evil: but if the
possible subject is no longer among beings, or, still among beings, is devoid
of life... why, a stone is not more immune.
- If, on the contrary, after death life and soul continue, then death
will be no evil but a good; Soul, disembodied, is the freer to ply its own Act.
- If it be taken into the All-Soul- what evil can reach it There? And
as the Gods are possessed of Good and untouched by evil- so, certainly is the
Soul that has preserved its essential character. And if it should lose its
purity, the evil it experiences is not in its death but in its life. Suppose it
to be under punishment in the lower world, even there the evil thing is its
life and not its death; the misfortune is still life, a life of a definite
character.
- Life is a partnership of a Soul and body; death is the dissolution;
in either life or death, then, the Soul will feel itself at home.
- But, again, if life is good, how can death be anything but evil?
- Remember that the good of life, where it has any good at all, is not
due to anything in the partnership but to the repelling of evil by virtue;
death, then, must be the greater good.
- In a word, life in the body is of itself an evil but the Soul enters
its Good through Virtue, not living the life of the Couplement but holding
itself apart, even here.
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