Ennead II
Third tractate: Are the stars causes
Written by Plotinus, 250 AD
- 1. That the circuit of the stars indicates definite events to come
but without being the cause direct of all that happens, has been elsewhere
affirmed, and proved by some modicum of argument: but the subject demands more
precise and detailed investigation for to take the one view rather than the
other is of no small moment.
- The belief is that the planets in their courses actually produce not
merely such conditions as poverty, wealth, health and sickness but even
ugliness and beauty and, gravest of all, vices and virtue and the very acts
that spring from these qualities, the definite doings of each moment of virtue
or vice. We are to suppose the stars to be annoyed with men- and upon matters
in which men, moulded to what they are by the stars themselves, can surely do
them no wrong.
- They will be distributing what pass for their good gifts, not out of
kindness towards the recipients but as they themselves are affected pleasantly
or disagreeably at the various points of their course; so that they must be
supposed to change their plans as they stand at their zeniths or are declining.
- More absurdly still, some of them are supposed to be malicious and
others to be helpful, and yet the evil stars will bestow favours and the
benevolent act harshly: further, their action alters as they see each other or
not, so that, after all, they possess no definite nature but vary according to
their angles of aspect; a star is kindly when it sees one of its fellows but
changes at sight of another: and there is even a distinction to be made in the
seeing as it occurs in this figure or in that. Lastly, all acting together, the
fused influence is different again from that of each single star, just as the
blending of distinct fluids gives a mixture unlike any of them.
- Since these opinions and others of the same order are prevalent, it
will be well to examine them carefully one by one, beginning with the
fundamental question:
- 2. Are these planets to be thought of as soulless or unsouled?
- Suppose them, first, to be without Soul.
- In that case they can purvey only heat or cold- if cold from the
stars can be thought of- that is to say, any communication from them will
affect only our bodily nature, since all they have to communicate to us is
merely corporeal. This implies that no considerable change can be caused in the
bodies affected since emanations merely corporeal cannot differ greatly from
star to star, and must, moreover, blend upon earth into one collective
resultant: at most the differences would be such as depend upon local position,
upon nearness or farness with regard to the centre of influence. This
reasoning, of course, is as valid of any cold emanation there may be as of the
warm.
- Now, what is there in such corporeal action to account for the
various classes and kinds of men, learned and illiterate, scholars as against
orators, musicians as against people of other professions? Can a power merely
physical make rich or poor? Can it bring about such conditions as in no sense
depend upon the interaction of corporeal elements? Could it, for example, bring
a man such and such a brother, father, son, or wife, give him a stroke of good
fortune at a particular moment, or make him generalissimo or king?
- Next, suppose the stars to have life and mind and to be effective by
deliberate purpose.
- In that case, what have they suffered from us that they should, in
free will, do us hurt, they who are established in a divine place, themselves
divine? There is nothing in their nature of what makes men base, nor can our
weal or woe bring them the slightest good or ill.
- 3. Possibly, however, they act not by choice but under stress of
their several positions and collective figures?
- But if position and figure determined their action each several one
would necessarily cause identical effects with every other on entering any
given place or pattern.
- And that raises the question what effect for good or bad can be
produced upon any one of them by its transit in the parallel of this or that
section of the Zodiac circle- for they are not in the Zodiacal figure itself
but considerably beneath it especially since, whatever point they touch, they
are always in the heavens.
- It is absurd to think that the particular grouping under which a star
passes can modify either its character or its earthward influences. And can we
imagine it altered by its own progression as it rises, stands at centre,
declines? Exultant when at centre; dejected or enfeebled in declension; some
raging as they rise and growing benignant as they set, while declension brings
out the best in one among them; surely this cannot be?
- We must not forget that invariably every star, considered in itself,
is at centre with regard to some one given group and in decline with regard to
another and vice versa; and, very certainly, it is not at once happy and sad,
angry and kindly. There is no reasonable escape in representing some of them as
glad in their setting, others in their rising: they would still be grieving and
glad at one and the same time.
- Further, why should any distress of theirs work harm to us?
- No: we cannot think of them as grieving at all or as being cheerful
upon occasions: they must be continuously serene, happy in the good they enjoy
and the Vision before them. Each lives its own free life; each finds its Good
in its own Act; and this Act is not directed towards us.
- Like the birds of augury, the living beings of the heavens, having no
lot or part with us, may serve incidentally to foreshow the future, but they
have absolutely no main function in our regard.
- 4. It is again not in reason that a particular star should be
gladdened by seeing this or that other while, in a second couple, such an
aspect is distressing: what enmities can affect such beings? what causes of
enmity can there be among them?
- And why should there be any difference as a given star sees certain
others from the corner of a triangle or in opposition or at the angle of a
square?
- Why, again, should it see its fellow from some one given position and
yet, in the next Zodiacal figure, not see it, though the two are actually
nearer?
- And, the cardinal question; by what conceivable process could they
affect what is attributed to them? How explain either the action of any single
star independently or, still more perplexing, the effect of their combined
intentions?
- We cannot think of them entering into compromises, each renouncing
something of its efficiency and their final action in our regard amounting to a
concerted plan.
- No one star would suppress the contribution of another, nor would
star yield to star and shape its conduct under suasion.
- As for the fancy that while one is glad when it enters another's
region, the second is vexed when in its turn it occupies the place of the
first, surely this is like starting with the supposition of two friends and
then going on to talk of one being attracted to the other who, however, abhors
the first.
- 5. When they tell us that a certain cold star is more benevolent to
us in proportion as it is further away, they clearly make its harmful influence
depend upon the coldness of its nature; and yet it ought to be beneficent to us
when it is in the opposed Zodiacal figures.
- When the cold planet, we are told, is in opposition to the cold, both
become meanacing: but the natural effect would be a compromise.
- And we are asked to believe that one of them is happy by day and
grows kindly under the warmth, while another, of a fiery nature, is most
cheerful by night- as if it were not always day to them, light to them, and as
if the first one could be darkened by night at that great distance above the
earth's shadow.
- Then there is the notion that the moon, in conjunction with a certain
star, is softened at her full but is malignant in the same conjunction when her
light has waned; yet, if anything of this order could be admitted, the very
opposite would be the case. For when she is full to us she must be dark on the
further hemisphere, that is to that star which stands above her; and when dark
to us she is full to that other star, upon which only then, on the contrary,
does she look with her light. To the moon itself, in fact, it can make no
difference in what aspect she stands, for she is always lit on the upper or on
the under half: to the other star, the warmth from the moon, of which they
speak, might make a difference; but that warmth would reach it precisely when
the moon is without light to us; at its darkest to us it is full to that other,
and therefore beneficent. The darkness of the moon to us is of moment to the
earth, but brings no trouble to the planet above. That planet, it is alleged,
can give no help on account of its remoteness and therefore seems less well
disposed; but the moon at its full suffices to the lower realm so that the
distance of the other is of no importance. When the moon, though dark to us, is
in aspect with the Fiery Star she is held to be favourable: the reason alleged
is that the force of Mars is all-sufficient since it contains more fire than it
needs.
- The truth is that while the material emanations from the living
beings of the heavenly system are of various degrees of warmth- planet
differing from planet in this respect- no cold comes from them: the nature of
the space in which they have their being is voucher for that.
- The star known as Jupiter includes a due measure of fire [and
warmth], in this resembling the Morning-star and therefore seeming to be in
alliance with it. In aspect with what is known as the Fiery Star, Jupiter is
beneficent by virtue of the mixing of influences: in aspect with Saturn
unfriendly by dint of distance. Mercury, it would seem, is indifferent whatever
stars it be in aspect with; for it adopts any and every character.
- But all the stars are serviceable to the Universe, and therefore can
stand to each other only as the service of the Universe demands, in a harmony
like that observed in the members of any one animal form. They exist
essentially for the purpose of the Universe, just as the gall exists for the
purposes of the body as a whole not less than for its own immediate function:
it is to be the inciter of the animal spirits but without allowing the entire
organism and its own especial region to run riot. Some such balance of function
was indispensable in the All- bitter with sweet. There must be differentiation-
eyes and so forth- but all the members will be in sympathy with the entire
animal frame to which they belong. Only so can there be a unity and a total
harmony.
- And in such a total, analogy will make every part a Sign.
- 6. But that this same Mars, or Aphrodite, in certain aspects should
cause adulteries- as if they could thus, through the agency of human
incontinence, satisfy their own mutual desires- is not such a notion the height
of unreason? And who could accept the fancy that their happiness comes from
their seeing each other in this or that relative position and not from their
own settled nature?
- Again: countless myriads of living beings are born and continue to
be: to minister continuously to every separate one of these; to make them
famous, rich, poor, lascivious; to shape the active tendencies of every single
one- what kind of life is this for the stars, how could they possibly handle a
task so huge?
- They are to watch, we must suppose, the rising of each several
constellation and upon that signal to act; such a one, they see, has risen by
so many degrees, representing so many of the periods of its upward path; they
reckon on their fingers at what moment they must take the action which,
executed prematurely, would be out of order: and in the sum, there is no One
Being controlling the entire scheme; all is made over to the stars singly, as
if there were no Sovereign Unity, standing as source of all the forms of Being
in subordinate association with it, and delegating to the separate members, in
their appropriate Kinds, the task of accomplishing its purposes and bringing
its latent potentiality into act.
- This is a separatist theory, tenable only by minds ignorant of the
nature of a Universe which has a ruling principle and a first cause operative
downwards through every member.
- 7. But, if the stars announce the future- as we hold of many other
things also- what explanation of the cause have we to offer? What explains the
purposeful arrangement thus implied? Obviously, unless the particular is
included under some general principle of order, there can be no signification.
- We may think of the stars as letters perpetually being inscribed on
the heavens or inscribed once for all and yet moving as they pursue the other
tasks allotted to them: upon these main tasks will follow the quality of
signifying, just as the one principle underlying any living unit enables us to
reason from member to member, so that for example we may judge of character and
even of perils and safeguards by indications in the eyes or in some other part
of the body. If these parts of us are members of a whole, so are we: in
different ways the one law applies.
- All teems with symbol; the wise man is the man who in any one thing
can read another, a process familiar to all of us in not a few examples of
everyday experience.
- But what is the comprehensive principle of co-ordination? Establish
this and we have a reasonable basis for the divination, not only by stars but
also by birds and other animals, from which we derive guidance in our varied
concerns.
- All things must be enchained; and the sympathy and correspondence
obtaining in any one closely knit organism must exist, first, and most
intensely, in the All. There must be one principle constituting this unit of
many forms of life and enclosing the several members within the unity, while at
the same time, precisely as in each thing of detail the parts too have each a
definite function, so in the All each several member must have its own task-
but more markedly so since in this case the parts are not merely members but
themselves Alls, members of the loftier Kind.
- Thus each entity takes its origin from one Principle and, therefore,
while executing its own function, works in with every other member of that All
from which its distinct task has by no means cut it off: each performs its act,
each receives something from the others, every one at its own moment bringing
its touch of sweet or bitter. And there is nothing undesigned, nothing of
chance, in all the process: all is one scheme of differentiation, starting from
the Firsts and working itself out in a continuous progression of Kinds.
- 8. Soul, then, in the same way, is intent upon a task of its own;
alike in its direct course and in its divagation it is the cause of all by its
possession of the Thought of the First Principle: thus a Law of Justice goes
with all that exists in the Universe which, otherwise, would be dissolved, and
is perdurable because the entire fabric is guided as much by the orderliness as
by the power of the controlling force. And in this order the stars, as being no
minor members of the heavenly system, are co-operators contributing at once to
its stately beauty and to its symbolic quality. Their symbolic power extends to
the entire realm of sense, their efficacy only to what they patently do.
- For our part, nature keeps us upon the work of the Soul as long as we
are not wrecked in the multiplicity of the Universe: once thus sunk and held we
pay the penalty, which consists both in the fall itself and in the lower rank
thus entailed upon us: riches and poverty are caused by the combinations of
external fact.
- And what of virtue and vice?
- That question has been amply discussed elsewhere: in a word, virtue
is ours by the ancient staple of the Soul; vice is due to the commerce of a
Soul with the outer world.
- 9. This brings us to the Spindle-destiny, spun according to the
ancients by the Fates. To Plato the Spindle represents the co-operation of the
moving and the stable elements of the kosmic circuit: the Fates with Necessity,
Mother of the Fates, manipulate it and spin at the birth of every being, so
that all comes into existence through Necessity.
- In the Timaeus, the creating God bestows the essential of the Soul,
but it is the divinities moving in the kosmos [the stars] that infuse the
powerful affections holding from Necessity our impulse and our desire, our
sense of pleasure and of pain- and that lower phase of the Soul in which such
experiences originate. By this statement our personality is bound up with the
stars, whence our Soul [as total of Principle and affections] takes shape; and
we are set under necessity at our very entrance into the world: our temperament
will be of the stars' ordering, and so, therefore, the actions which derive
from temperament, and all the experiences of a nature shaped to impressions.
- What, after all this, remains to stand for the "We"?
- The "We" is the actual resultant of a Being whose nature includes,
with certain sensibilities, the power of governing them. Cut off as we are by
the nature of the body, God has yet given us, in the midst of all this evil,
virtue the unconquerable, meaningless in a state of tranquil safety but
everything where its absence would be peril of fall.
- Our task, then, is to work for our liberation from this sphere,
severing ourselves from all that has gathered about us; the total man is to be
something better than a body ensouled- the bodily element dominant with a trace
of Soul running through it and a resultant life-course mainly of the body- for
in such a combination all is, in fact, bodily. There is another life,
emancipated, whose quality is progression towards the higher realm, towards the
good and divine, towards that Principle which no one possesses except by
deliberate usage but so may appropriate, becoming, each personally, the higher,
the beautiful, the Godlike, and living, remote, in and by It- unless one choose
to go bereaved of that higher Soul and therefore, to live fate-bound, no longer
profiting, merely, by the significance of the sidereal system but becoming as
it were a part sunken in it and dragged along with the whole thus adopted.
- For every human Being is of twofold character; there is that
compromise-total and there is the Authentic Man: and it is so with the Kosmos
as a whole; it is in the one phase a conjunction of body with a certain form of
the Soul bound up in body; in the other phase it is the Universal Soul, that
which is not itself embodied but flashes down its rays into the embodied Soul:
and the same twofold quality belongs to the Sun and the other members of the
heavenly system.
- To the remoter Soul, the pure, sun and stars communicate no baseness.
In their efficacy upon the [material] All, they act as parts of it, as ensouled
bodies within it; and they act only upon what is partial; body is the agent
while, at the same time, it becomes the vehicle through which is transmitted
something of the star's will and of that authentic Soul in it which is
steadfastly in contemplation of the Highest.
- But [with every allowance to the lower forces] all follows either
upon that Highest or rather upon the Beings about It- we may think of the
Divine as a fire whose outgoing warmth pervades the Universe- or upon
whatsoever is transmitted by the one Soul [the divine first Soul] to the other,
its Kin [the Soul of any particular being]. All that is graceless is admixture.
For the Universe is in truth a thing of blend, and if we separate from it that
separable Soul, the residue is little. The All is a God when the divine Soul is
counted in with it; "the rest," we read, "is a mighty spirit and its ways are
subdivine."
- 10. If all this be true, we must at once admit signification, though,
neither singly nor collectively, can we ascribe to the stars any efficacy
except in what concerns the [material] All and in what is of their own
function.
- We must admit that the Soul before entering into birth presents
itself bearing with it something of its own, for it could never touch body
except under stress of a powerful inner impulse; we must admit some element of
chance around it from its very entry, since the moment and conditions are
determined by the kosmic circuit: and we must admit some effective power in
that circuit itself; it is co-operative, and completes of its own act the task
that belongs to the All of which everything in the circuit takes the rank and
function of a part.
- 11. And we must remember that what comes from the supernals does not
enter into the recipients as it left the source; fire, for instance, will be
duller; the loving instinct will degenerate and issue in ugly forms of the
passion; the vital energy in a subject not so balanced as to display the mean
of manly courage, will come out as either ferocity or faint-heartedness; and
ambition... in love...; and the instinct towards good sets up the pursuit of
semblant beauty; intellectual power at its lowest produces the extreme of
wickedness, for wickedness is a miscalculating effort towards Intelligence.
- Any such quality, modified at best from its supreme form,
deteriorates again within itself: things of any kind that approach from above,
altered by merely leaving their source change further still by their blending
with bodies, with Matter, with each other.
- 12. All that thus proceeds from the supernal combines into a unity
and every existing entity takes something from this blended infusion so that
the result is the thing itself plus some quality. The effluence does not make
the horse but adds something to it; for horse comes by horse, and man by man:
the sun plays its part no doubt in the shaping, but the man has his origin in
the Human-Principle. Outer things have their effect, sometimes to hurt and
sometimes to help; like a father, they often contribute to good but sometimes
also to harm; but they do not wrench the human being from the foundations of
its nature; though sometimes Matter is the dominant, and the human principle
takes the second place so that there is a failure to achieve perfection; the
Ideal has been attenuated.
- 13. Of phenomena of this sphere some derive from the Kosmic Circuit
and some not: we must take them singly and mark them off, assigning to each its
origin.
- The gist of the whole matter lies in the consideration that Soul
governs this All by the plan contained in the Reason-Principle and plays in the
All exactly the part of the particular principle which in every living-thing
forms the members of the organism and adjusts them to the unity of which they
are portions; the entire force of the Soul is represented in the All, but, in
the parts, Soul is present only in proportion to the degree of essential
reality held by each of such partial objects. Surrounding every separate entity
there are other entities, whose approach will sometimes be hostile and
sometimes helpful to the purpose of its nature; but to the All taken in its
length and breadth each and every separate existent is an adjusted part,
holding its own characteristic and yet contributing by its own native tendency
to the entire life-history of the Universe.
- The soulless parts of the All are merely instruments; all their
action is effected, so to speak, under a compulsion from outside themselves.
- The ensouled fall into two classes. The one kind has a motion of its
own, but haphazard like that of horses between the shafts but before their
driver sets the course; they are set right by the whip. In the Living-Being
possessed of Reason, the nature-principle includes the driver; where the driver
is intelligent, it takes in the main a straight path to a set end. But both
classes are members of the All and co-operate towards the general purpose.
- The greater and most valuable among them have an important operation
over a wide range: their contribution towards the life of the whole consists in
acting, not in being acted upon; others, but feebly equipped for action, are
almost wholly passive; there is an intermediate order whose members contain
within themselves a principle of productivity and activity and make themselves
very effective in many spheres or ways and yet serve also by their passivity.
- Thus the All stands as one all-complete Life, whose members, to the
measure in which each contains within itself the Highest, effect all that is
high and noble: and the entire scheme must be subordinate to its Dirigeant as
an army to its general, "following upon Zeus"- it has been said- "as he
proceeds towards the Intelligible Kind."
- Secondary in the All are those of its parts which possess a less
exalted nature just as in us the members rank lower than the Soul; and so all
through, there is a general analogy between the things of the All and our own
members- none of quite equal rank.
- All living things, then- all in the heavens and all elsewhere- fall
under the general Reason-Principle of the All- they have been made parts with a
view to the whole: not one of these parts, however exalted, has power to effect
any alteration of these Reason-Principles or of things shaped by them and to
them; some modification one part may work upon another, whether for better or
for worse; but there is no power that can wrest anything outside of its
distinct nature.
- The part effecting such a modification for the worse may act in
several ways.
- It may set up some weakness restricted to the material frame. Or it
may carry the weakness through to the sympathetic Soul which by the medium of
the material frame, become a power to debasement, has been delivered over,
though never in its essence, to the inferior order of being. Or, in the case of
a material frame ill-organized, it may check all such action [of the Soul] upon
the material frame as demands a certain collaboration in the part acted upon:
thus a lyre may be so ill-strung as to be incapable of the melodic exactitude
necessary to musical effect.
- 14. What of poverty and riches, glory and power?
- In the case of inherited fortune, the stars merely announce a rich
man, exactly as they announce the high social standing of the child born to a
distinguished house.
- Wealth may be due to personal activity: in this case if the body has
contributed, part of the effect is due to whatever has contributed towards the
physical powers, first the parents and then, if place has had its influence,
sky and earth; if the body has borne no part of the burden, then the success,
and all the splendid accompaniments added by the Recompensers, must be
attributed to virtue exclusively. If fortune has come by gift from the good,
then the source of the wealth is, again, virtue: if by gift from the evil, but
to a meritorious recipient, then the credit must be given to the action of the
best in them: if the recipient is himself unprincipled, the wealth must be
attributed primarily to the very wickedness and to whatsoever is responsible
for the wickedness, while the givers bear an equal share in the wrong.
- When the success is due to labour, tillage for example, it must be
put down to the tiller, with all his environment as contributory. In the case
of treasure-trove, something from the All has entered into action; and if this
be so, it will be foreshown- since all things make a chain, so that we can
speak of things universally. Money is lost: if by robbery, the blame lies with
the robber and the native principle guiding him: if by shipwreck, the cause is
the chain of events. As for good fame, it is either deserved and then is due to
the services done and to the merit of those appraising them, or it is
undeserved, and then must be attributed to the injustice of those making the
award. And the same principle holds is regards power- for this also may be
rightly or unrightly placed- it depends either upon the merit of the dispensers
of place or upon the man himself who has effected his purpose by the
organization of supporters or in many other possible ways. Marriages,
similarly, are brought about either by choice or by chance interplay of
circumstance. And births are determined by marriages: the child is moulded true
to type when all goes well; otherwise it is marred by some inner detriment,
something due to the mother personally or to an environment unfavourable to
that particular conception.
- 15. According to Plato, lots and choice play a part [in the
determination of human conditions] before the Spindle of Necessity is turned;
that once done, only the Spindle-destiny is valid; it fixes the chosen
conditions irretrievably since the elected guardian-spirit becomes accessory to
their accomplishment.
- But what is the significance of the Lots?
- By the Lots we are to understand birth into the conditions actually
existent in the All at the particular moment of each entry into body, birth
into such and such a physical frame, from such and such parents, in this or
that place, and generally all that in our phraseology is the External.
- For Particulars and Universals alike it is established that to the
first of those known as the Fates, to Clotho the Spinner, must be due the unity
and as it were interweaving of all that exists: Lachesis presides over the
Lots: to Atropos must necessarily belong the conduct of mundane events.
- Of men, some enter into life as fragments of the All, bound to that
which is external to themselves: they are victims of a sort of fascination, and
are hardly, or not at all, themselves: but others mastering all this-
straining, so to speak, by the head towards the Higher, to what is outside even
the Soul- preserve still the nobility and the ancient privilege of the Soul's
essential being.
- For certainly we cannot think of the Soul as a thing whose nature is
just a sum of impressions from outside- as if it, alone, of all that exists,
had no native character.
- No: much more than all else, the Soul, possessing the Idea which
belongs to a Principle, must have as its native wealth many powers serving to
the activities of its Kind. It is an Essential-Existent and with this Existence
must go desire and act and the tendency towards some good.
- While body and soul stand one combined thing, there is a joint
nature, a definite entity having definite functions and employments; but as
soon as any Soul is detached, its employments are kept apart, its very own: it
ceases to take the body's concerns to itself: it has vision now: body and soul
stand widely apart.
- 16. The question arises what phase of the Soul enters into the union
for the period of embodiment and what phase remains distinct, what is separable
and what necessarily interlinked, and in general what the Living-Being is.
- On all this there has been a conflict of teaching: the matter must be
examined later on from quite other considerations than occupy us here. For the
present let us explain in what sense we have described the All as the expressed
idea of the Governing Soul.
- One theory might be that the Soul creates the particular entities in
succession- man followed by horse and other animals domestic or wild: fire and
earth, though, first of all- that it watches these creations acting upon each
other whether to help or to harm, observes, and no more, the tangled web formed
of all these strands, and their unfailing sequences; and that it makes no
concern of the result beyond securing the reproduction of the primal
living-beings, leaving them for the rest to act upon each other according to
their definite natures.
- Another view makes the soul answerable for all that thus comes about,
since its first creations have set up the entire enchainment.
- No doubt the Reason-Principle [conveyed by the Soul] covers all the
action and experience of this realm: nothing happens, even here, by any form of
haphazard; all follows a necessary order.
- Is everything, then, to be attributed to the act of the
Reason-Principles?
- To their existence, no doubt, but not to their effective action; they
exist and they know; or better, the Soul, which contains the engendering
Reason-Principle, knows the results of all it has brought to pass. For
whensoever similar factors meet and act in relation to each other, similar
consequences must inevitably ensue: the Soul adopting or foreplanning the given
conditions accomplishes the due outcome and links all into a total.
- All, then, is antecedent and resultant, each sequent becoming in turn
an antecedent once it has taken its place among things. And perhaps this is a
cause of progressive deterioration: men, for instance, are not as they were of
old; by dint of interval and of the inevitable law, the Reason-Principles have
ceded something to the characteristics of the Matter.
- But:
- The Soul watches the ceaselessly changing universe and follows all
the fate of all its works: this is its life, and it knows no respite from this
care, but is ever labouring to bring about perfection, planning to lead all to
an unending state of excellence- like a farmer, first sowing and planting and
then constantly setting to rights where rainstorms and long frosts and high
gales have played havoc.
- If such a conception of Soul be rejected as untenable, we are obliged
to think that the Reason-Principles themselves foreknew or even contained the
ruin and all the consequences of flaw.
- But then we would be imputing the creation of evil to the
Reason-Principles, though the arts and their guiding principle do not include
blundering, do not cover the inartistic, the destruction of the work of art.
- And here it will be objected that in All there is nothing contrary to
nature, nothing evil.
- Still, by the side of the better there exists also what is less good.
- Well, perhaps even the less good has its contributory value in the
All. Perhaps there is no need that everything be good. Contraries may
co-operate; and without opposites there could be no ordered Universe: all
living beings of the partial realm include contraries. The better elements are
compelled into existence and moulded to their function by the Reason-Principle
directly; the less good are potentially present in the Reason-Principles,
actually present in the phenomena themselves; the Soul's power had reached its
limit, and failed to bring the Reason-Principles into complete actuality since,
amid the clash of these antecedent Principles, Matter had already from its own
stock produced the less good.
- Yet, with all this, Matter is continuously overruled towards the
better; so that out of the total of things- modified by Soul on the one hand
and by Matter on the other hand, and on neither hand as sound as in the
Reason-Principles- there is, in the end, a Unity.
- 17. But these Reason-Principles, contained in the Soul, are they
Thoughts?
- And if so, by what process does the Soul create in accordance with
these Thoughts?
- It is upon Matter that this act of the Reason is exercised; and what
acts physically is not an intellectual operation or a vision, but a power
modifying matter, not conscious of it but merely acting upon it: the
Reason-Principle, in other words, acts much like a force producing a figure or
pattern upon water- that of a circle, suppose, where the formation of the ring
is conditioned by something distinct from that force itself.
- If this is so, the prior puissance of the Soul [that which conveys
the Reason-Principles] must act by manipulating the other Soul, that which is
united with Matter and has the generative function.
- But is this handling the result of calculation?
- Calculation implies reference. Reference, then, to something outside
or to something contained within itself? If to its own content, there is no
need of reasoning, which could not itself perform the act of creation; creation
is the operation of that phase of the Soul which contains Ideal-Principles; for
that is its stronger puissance, its creative part.
- It creates, then, on the model of the Ideas; for, what it has
received from the Intellectual-Principle it must pass on in turn.
- In sum, then, the Intellectual-Principle gives from itself to the
Soul of the All which follows immediately upon it: this again gives forth from
itself to its next, illuminated and imprinted by it; and that secondary Soul at
once begins to create, as under order, unhindered in some of its creations,
striving in others against the repugnance of Matter.
- It has a creative power, derived; it is stored with Reason-Principles
not the very originals: therefore it creates, but not in full accordance with
the Principles from which it has been endowed: something enters from itself;
and, plainly, this is inferior. The issue then is something living, yes; but
imperfect, hindering its own life, something very poor and reluctant and crude,
formed in a Matter that is the fallen sediment of the Higher Order, bitter and
embittering. This is the Soul's contribution to the All.
- 18. Are the evils in the Universe necessary because it is of later
origin than the Higher Sphere?
- Perhaps rather because without evil the All would be incomplete. For
most or even all forms of evil serve the Universe- much as the poisonous snake
has its use- though in most cases their function is unknown. Vice itself has
many useful sides: it brings about much that is beautiful, in artistic
creations for example, and it stirs us to thoughtful living, not allowing us to
drowse in security.
- If all this is so, then [the secret of creation is that] the Soul of
the All abides in contemplation of the Highest and Best, ceaselessly striving
towards the Intelligible Kind and towards God: but, thus absorbing and filled
full, it overflows- so to speak- and the image it gives forth, its last
utterance towards the lower, will be the creative puissance.
- This ultimate phase, then, is the Maker, secondary to that aspect of
the Soul which is primarily saturated from the Divine Intelligence. But the
Creator above all is the Intellectual-Principle, as giver, to the Soul that
follows it, of those gifts whose traces exist in the Third Kind.
- Rightly, therefore, is this Kosmos described as an image continuously
being imaged, the First and the Second Principles immobile, the Third, too,
immobile essentially, but, accidentally and in Matter, having motion.
- For as long as divine Mind and Soul exist, the divine Thought-Forms
will pour forth into that phase of the Soul: as long as there is a sun, all
that streams from it will be some form of Light.
Essene Nazarean Church of Mount Carmel
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