Ennead V
First tractate: The three initial hypostases
Written by Plotinus, 250 AD
- 1. What can it be that has brought the souls to forget the father,
God, and, though members of the Divine and entirely of that world, to ignore at
once themselves and It?
- The evil that has overtaken them has its source in self-will, in the
entry into the sphere of process, and in the primal differentiation with the
desire for self ownership. They conceived a pleasure in this freedom and
largely indulged their own motion; thus they were hurried down the wrong path,
and in the end, drifting further and further, they came to lose even the
thought of their origin in the Divine. A child wrenched young from home and
brought up during many years at a distance will fail in knowledge of its father
and of itself: the souls, in the same way, no longer discern either the
divinity or their own nature; ignorance of their rank brings self-depreciation;
they misplace their respect, honouring everything more than themselves; all
their awe and admiration is for the alien, and, clinging to this, they have
broken apart, as far as a soul may, and they make light of what they have
deserted; their regard for the mundane and their disregard of themselves bring
about their utter ignoring of the divine.
- Admiring pursuit of the external is a confession of inferiority; and
nothing thus holding itself inferior to things that rise and perish, nothing
counting itself less honourable and less enduring than all else it admires
could ever form any notion of either the nature or the power of God.
- A double discipline must be applied if human beings in this pass are
to be reclaimed, and brought back to their origins, lifted once more towards
the Supreme and One and First.
- There is the method, which we amply exhibit elsewhere, declaring the
dishonour of the objects which the Soul holds here in honour; the second
teaches or recalls to the soul its race and worth; this latter is the leading
truth, and, clearly brought out, is the evidence of the other.
- It must occupy us now for it bears closely upon our enquiry to which
it is the natural preliminary: the seeker is soul and it must start from a true
notion of the nature and quality by which soul may undertake the search; it
must study itself in order to learn whether it has the faculty for the enquiry,
the eye for the object proposed, whether in fact we ought to seek; for if the
object is alien the search must be futile, while if there is relationship the
solution of our problem is at once desirable and possible.
- 2. Let every soul recall, then, at the outset the truth that soul is
the author of all living things, that it has breathed the life into them all,
whatever is nourished by earth and sea, all the creatures of the air, the
divine stars in the sky; it is the maker of the sun; itself formed and ordered
this vast heaven and conducts all that rhythmic motion; and it is a principle
distinct from all these to which it gives law and movement and life, and it
must of necessity be more honourable than they, for they gather or dissolve as
soul brings them life or abandons them, but soul, since it never can abandon
itself, is of eternal being.
- How life was purveyed to the universe of things and to the separate
beings in it may be thus conceived:
- That great soul must stand pictured before another soul, one not
mean, a soul that has become worthy to look, emancipate from the lure, from all
that binds its fellows in bewitchment, holding itself in quietude. Let not
merely the enveloping body be at peace, body's turmoil stilled, but all that
lies around, earth at peace, and sea at peace, and air and the very heavens.
Into that heaven, all at rest, let the great soul be conceived to roll inward
at every point, penetrating, permeating, from all sides pouring in its light.
As the rays of the sun throwing their brilliance upon a lowering cloud make it
gleam all gold, so the soul entering the material expanse of the heavens has
given life, has given immortality: what was abject it has lifted up; and the
heavenly system, moved now in endless motion by the soul that leads it in
wisdom, has become a living and a blessed thing; the soul domiciled within, it
takes worth where, before the soul, it was stark body- clay and water- or,
rather, the blankness of Matter, the absence of Being, and, as an author says,
"the execration of the Gods."
- The Soul's nature and power will be brought out more clearly, more
brilliantly, if we consider next how it envelops the heavenly system and guides
all to its purposes: for it has bestowed itself upon all that huge expanse so
that every interval, small and great alike, all has been ensouled.
- The material body is made up of parts, each holding its own place,
some in mutual opposition and others variously interdependent; the soul is in
no such condition; it is not whittled down so that life tells of a part of the
soul and springs where some such separate portion impinges; each separate life
lives by the soul entire, omnipresent in the likeness of the engendering
father, entire in unity and entire in diffused variety. By the power of the
soul the manifold and diverse heavenly system is a unit: through soul this
universe is a God: and the sun is a God because it is ensouled; so too the
stars: and whatsoever we ourselves may be, it is all in virtue of soul; for
"dead is viler than dung."
- This, by which the gods are divine, must be the oldest God of them
all: and our own soul is of that same Ideal nature, so that to consider it,
purified, freed from all accruement, is to recognise in ourselves that same
value which we have found soul to be, honourable above all that is bodily. For
what is body but earth, and, taking fire itself, what [but soul] is its burning
power? So it is with all the compounds of earth and fire, even with water and
air added to them?
- If, then, it is the presence of soul that brings worth, how can a man
slight himself and run after other things? You honour the Soul elsewhere;
honour then yourself.
- 3. The Soul once seen to be thus precious, thus divine, you may hold
the faith that by its possession you are already nearing God: in the strength
of this power make upwards towards Him: at no great distance you must attain:
there is not much between.
- But over this divine, there is still a diviner: grasp the upward
neighbour of the soul, its prior and source.
- Soul, for all the worth we have shown to belong to it, is yet a
secondary, an image of the Intellectual-Principle: reason uttered is an image
of the reason stored within the soul, and in the same way soul is an utterance
of the Intellectual-Principle: it is even the total of its activity, the entire
stream of life sent forth by that Principle to the production of further being;
it is the forthgoing heat of a fire which has also heat essentially inherent.
But within the Supreme we must see energy not as an overflow but in the double
aspect of integral inherence with the establishment of a new being. Sprung, in
other words, from the Intellectual-Principle, Soul is intellective, but with an
intellection operation by the method of reasonings: for its perfecting it must
look to that Divine Mind, which may be thought of as a father watching over the
development of his child born imperfect in comparison with himself.
- Thus its substantial existence comes from the Intellectual-Principle;
and the Reason within it becomes Act in virtue of its contemplation of that
prior; for its thought and act are its own intimate possession when it looks to
the Supreme Intelligence; those only are soul-acts which are of this
intellective nature and are determined by its own character; all that is less
noble is foreign [traceable to Matter] and is accidental to the soul in the
course of its peculiar task.
- In two ways, then, the Intellectual-Principle enhances the divine
quality of the soul, as father and as immanent presence; nothing separates them
but the fact that they are not one and the same, that there is succession, that
over against a recipient there stands the ideal-form received; but this
recipient, Matter to the Supreme Intelligence, is also noble as being at once
informed by divine intellect and uncompounded.
- What the Intellectual-Principle must be is carried in the single word
that Soul, itself so great, is still inferior.
- 4. But there is yet another way to this knowledge:
- Admiring the world of sense as we look out upon its vastness and
beauty and the order of its eternal march, thinking of the gods within it, seen
and hidden, and the celestial spirits and all the life of animal and plant, let
us mount to its archetype, to the yet more authentic sphere: there we are to
contemplate all things as members of the Intellectual- eternal in their own
right, vested with a self-springing consciousness and life- and, presiding over
all these, the unsoiled Intelligence and the unapproachable wisdom.
- That archetypal world is the true Golden Age, age of Kronos, who is
the Intellectual-Principle as being the offspring or exuberance of God. For
here is contained all that is immortal: nothing here but is Divine Mind; all is
God; this is the place of every soul. Here is rest unbroken: for how can that
seek change, in which all is well; what need that reach to, which holds all
within itself; what increase can that desire, which stands utterly achieved?
All its content, thus, is perfect, that itself may be perfect throughout, as
holding nothing that is less than the divine, nothing that is less than
intellective. Its knowing is not by search but by possession, its blessedness
inherent, not acquired; for all belongs to it eternally and it holds the
authentic Eternity imitated by Time which, circling round the Soul, makes
towards the new thing and passes by the old. Soul deals with thing after thing-
now Socrates; now a horse: always some one entity from among beings- but the
Intellectual-Principle is all and therefore its entire content is
simultaneously present in that identity: this is pure being in eternal
actuality; nowhere is there any future, for every then is a now; nor is there
any past, for nothing there has ever ceased to be; everything has taken its
stand for ever, an identity well pleased, we might say, to be as it is; and
everything, in that entire content, is Intellectual-Principle and Authentic
Existence; and the total of all is Intellectual-Principle entire and Being
entire. Intellectual-Principle by its intellective act establishes Being, which
in turn, as the object of intellection, becomes the cause of intellection and
of existence to the Intellectual-Principle- though, of course, there is another
cause of intellection which is also a cause to Being, both rising in a source
distinct from either.
- Now while these two are coalescents, having their existence in
common, and are never apart, still the unity they form is two-sided; there is
Intellectual-Principle as against Being, the intellectual agent as against the
object of intellection; we consider the intellective act and we have the
Intellectual-Principle; we think of the object of that act and we have Being.
- Such difference there must be if there is to be any intellection; but
similarly there must also be identity [since, in perfect knowing, subject and
object are identical.]
- Thus the Primals [the first "Categories"] are seen to be:
Intellectual-Principle; Existence; Difference; Identity: we must include also
Motion and Rest: Motion provides for the intellectual act, Rest preserves
identity as Difference gives at once a Knower and a Known, for, failing this,
all is one, and silent.
- So too the objects of intellection [the ideal content of the Divine
Mind]- identical in virtue of the self-concentration of the principle which is
their common ground- must still be distinct each from another; this distinction
constitutes Difference.
- The Intellectual Kosmos thus a manifold, Number and Quantity arise:
Quality is the specific character of each of these ideas which stand as the
principles from which all else derives.
- 5. As a manifold, then, this God, the Intellectual-Principle, exists
within the Soul here, the Soul which once for all stands linked a member of the
divine, unless by a deliberate apostasy.
- Bringing itself close to the divine Intellect, becoming, as it were,
one with this, it seeks still further: What Being, now, has engendered this
God, what is the Simplex preceding this multiple; what the cause at once of its
existence and of its existing as a manifold; what the source of this Number,
this Quantity?
- Number, Quantity, is not primal: obviously before even duality, there
must stand the unity.
- The Dyad is a secondary; deriving from unity, it finds in unity the
determinant needed by its native indetermination: once there is any
determination, there is Number, in the sense, of course, of the real [the
archetypal] Number. And the soul is such a number or quantity. For the Primals
are not masses or magnitudes; all of that gross order is later, real only to
the sense-thought; even in seed the effective reality is not the moist
substance but the unseen- that is to say Number [as the determinant of
individual being] and the Reason-Principle [of the product to be].
- Thus by what we call the Number and the Dyad of that higher realm, we
mean Reason Principles and the Intellectual-Principle: but while the Dyad is,
as regards that sphere, undetermined- representing, as it were, the underly [or
Matter] of The One- the later Number [or Quantity]- that which rises from the
Dyad [Intellectual-Principle] and The One- is not Matter to the later existents
but is their forming-Idea, for all of them take shape, so to speak, from the
ideas rising within this. The determination of the Dyad is brought about partly
from its object- The One- and partly from itself, as is the case with all
vision in the act of sight: intellection [the Act of the Dyad] is vision
occupied upon The One.
- 6. But how and what does the Intellectual-Principle see and,
especially, how has it sprung from that which is to become the object of its
vision?
- The mind demands the existence of these Beings, but it is still in
trouble over the problem endlessly debated by the most ancient philosophers:
from such a unity as we have declared The One to be, how does anything at all
come into substantial existence, any multiplicity, dyad, or number? Why has the
Primal not remained self-gathered so that there be none of this profusion of
the manifold which we observe in existence and yet are compelled to trace to
that absolute unity?
- In venturing an answer, we first invoke God Himself, not in loud word
but in that way of prayer which is always within our power, leaning in soul
towards Him by aspiration, alone towards the alone. But if we seek the vision
of that great Being within the Inner Sanctuary- self-gathered, tranquilly
remote above all else- we begin by considering the images stationed at the
outer precincts, or, more exactly to the moment, the first image that appears.
How the Divine Mind comes into being must be explained:
- Everything moving has necessarily an object towards which it
advances; but since the Supreme can have no such object, we may not ascribe
motion to it: anything that comes into being after it can be produced only as a
consequence of its unfailing self-intention; and, of course, we dare not talk
of generation in time, dealing as we are with eternal Beings: where we speak of
origin in such reference, it is in the sense, merely, of cause and
subordination: origin from the Supreme must not be taken to imply any movement
in it: that would make the Being resulting from the movement not a second
principle but a third: the Movement would be the second hypostasis.
- Given this immobility in the Supreme, it can neither have yielded
assent nor uttered decree nor stirred in any way towards the existence of a
secondary.
- What happened then? What are we to conceive as rising in the
neighbourhood of that immobility?
- It must be a circumradiation- produced from the Supreme but from the
Supreme unaltering- and may be compared to the brilliant light encircling the
sun and ceaselessly generated from that unchanging substance.
- All existences, as long as they retain their character, produce-
about themselves, from their essence, in virtue of the power which must be in
them- some necessary, outward-facing hypostasis continuously attached to them
and representing in image the engendering archetypes: thus fire gives out its
heat; snow is cold not merely to itself; fragrant substances are a notable
instance; for, as long as they last, something is diffused from them and
perceived wherever they are present.
- Again, all that is fully achieved engenders: therefore the eternally
achieved engenders eternally an eternal being. At the same time, the offspring
is always minor: what then are we to think of the All-Perfect but that it can
produce nothing less than the very greatest that is later than itself. The
greatest, later than the divine unity, must be the Divine Mind, and it must be
the second of all existence, for it is that which sees The One on which alone
it leans while the First has no need whatever of it. The offspring of the prior
to Divine Mind can be no other than that Mind itself and thus is the loftiest
being in the universe, all else following upon it- the soul, for example, being
an utterance and act of the Intellectual-Principle as that is an utterance and
act of The One. But in soul the utterance is obscured, for soul is an image and
must look to its own original: that Principle, on the contrary, looks to the
First without mediation- thus becoming what it is- and has that vision not as
from a distance but as the immediate next with nothing intervening, close to
the One as Soul to it.
- The offspring must seek and love the begetter; and especially so when
begetter and begotten are alone in their sphere; when, in addition, the
begetter is the highest good, the offspring [inevitably seeking its Good] is
attached by a bond of sheer necessity, separated only in being distinct.
- 7. We must be more explicit:
- The Intellectual-Principle stands as the image of The One, firstly
because there is a certain necessity that the first should have its offspring,
carrying onward much of its quality, in other words that there be something in
its likeness as the sun's rays tell of the sun. Yet The One is not an
Intellectual-Principle; how then does it engender an Intellectual-Principle?
- Simply by the fact that in its self-quest it has vision: this very
seeing is the Intellectual-Principle. Any perception of the external indicates
either sensation or intellection, sensation symbolized by a line, intellection
by a circle... [corrupt passage].
- Of course the divisibility belonging to the circle does not apply to
the Intellectual-Principle; all, there too, is a unity, though a unity which is
the potentiality of all existence.
- The items of this potentiality the divine intellection brings out, so
to speak, from the unity and knows them in detail, as it must if it is to be an
intellectual principle.
- It has besides a consciousness, as it were, within itself of this
same potentiality; it knows that it can of itself beget an hypostasis and can
determine its own Being by the virtue emanating from its prior; it knows that
its nature is in some sense a definite part of the content of that First; that
it thence derives its essence, that its strength lies there and that its Being
takes perfection as a derivative and a recipient from the First. It sees that,
as a member of the realm of division and part, it receives life and
intellection and all else it has and is, from the undivided and partless, since
that First is no member of existence, but can be the source of all on condition
only of being held down by no one distinctive shape but remaining the
undeflected unity.
- [(CORRUPT)- Thus it would be the entire universe but that...]
- And so the First is not a thing among the things contained by the
Intellectual-Principle though the source of all. In virtue of this source,
things of the later order are essential beings; for from that fact there is
determination; each has its form: what has being cannot be envisaged as outside
of limit; the nature must be held fast by boundary and fixity; though to the
Intellectual Beings this fixity is no more than determination and form, the
foundations of their substantial existence.
- A being of this quality, like the Intellectual-Principle, must be
felt to be worthy of the all-pure: it could not derive from any other than from
the first principle of all; as it comes into existence, all other beings must
be simultaneously engendered- all the beauty of the Ideas, all the Gods of the
Intellectual realm. And it still remains pregnant with this offspring; for it
has, so to speak, drawn all within itself again, holding them lest they fall
away towards Matter to be "brought up in the House of Rhea" [in the realm of
flux]. This is the meaning hidden in the Mysteries, and in the Myths of the
gods: Kronos, as the wisest, exists before Zeus; he must absorb his offspring
that, full within himself, he may be also an Intellectual-Principle manifest in
some product of his plenty; afterwards, the myth proceeds, Kronos engenders
Zeus, who already exists as the [necessary and eternal] outcome of the plenty
there; in other words the offspring of the Divine Intellect, perfect within
itself, is Soul [the life-principle carrying forward the Ideas in the Divine
Mind].
- Now, even in the Divine the engendered could not be the very highest;
it must be a lesser, an image; it will be undetermined, as the Divine is, but
will receive determination, and, so to speak, its shaping idea, from the
progenitor.
- Yet any offspring of the Intellectual-Principle must be a
Reason-Principle; the thought of the Divine Mind must be a substantial
existence: such then is that [Soul] which circles about the Divine Mind, its
light, its image inseparably attached to it: on the upper level united with it,
filled from it, enjoying it, participant in its nature, intellective with it,
but on the lower level in contact with the realm beneath itself, or, rather,
generating in turn an offspring which must lie beneath; of this lower we will
treat later; so far we deal still with the Divine.
- 8. This is the explanation of Plato's Triplicity, in the passage
where he names as the Primals the Beings gathered about the King of All, and
establishes a Secondary containing the Secondaries, and a Third containing the
Tertiaries.
- He teaches, also, that there is an author of the Cause, that is of
the Intellectual-Principle, which to him is the Creator who made the Soul, as
he tells us, in the famous mixing bowl. This author of the causing principle,
of the divine mind, is to him the Good, that which transcends the
Intellectual-Principle and transcends Being: often too he uses the term "The
Idea" to indicate Being and the Divine Mind. Thus Plato knows the order of
generation- from the Good, the Intellectual-Principle; from the
Intellectual-Principle, the Soul. These teachings are, therefore, no novelties,
no inventions of today, but long since stated, if not stressed; our doctrine
here is the explanation of an earlier and can show the antiquity of these
opinions on the testimony of Plato himself.
- Earlier, Parmenides made some approach to the doctrine in identifying
Being with Intellectual-Principle while separating Real Being from the realm of
sense.
- "Knowing and Being are one thing he says, and this unity is to him
motionless in spite of the intellection he attributes to it: to preserve its
unchanging identity he excludes all bodily movement from it; and he compares it
to a huge sphere in that it holds and envelops all existence and that its
intellection is not an outgoing act but internal. Still, with all his
affirmation of unity, his own writings lay him open to the reproach that his
unity turns out to be a multiplicity.
- The Platonic Parmenides is more exact; the distinction is made
between the Primal One, a strictly pure Unity, and a secondary One which is a
One-Many and a third which is a One-and-many; thus he too is in accordance with
our thesis of the Three Kinds.
- 9. Anaxagoras, again, in his assertion of a Mind pure and unmixed,
affirms a simplex First and a sundered One, though writing long ago he failed
in precision.
- Heraclitus, with his sense of bodily forms as things of ceaseless
process and passage, knows the One as eternal and intellectual.
- In Empedocles, similarly, we have a dividing principle, "Strife," set
against "Friendship"- which is The One and is to him bodiless, while the
elements represent Matter.
- Later there is Aristotle; he begins by making the First transcendent
and intellective but cancels that primacy by supposing it to have
self-intellection. Further he affirms a multitude of other intellective beings-
as many indeed as there are orbs in the heavens; one such principle as in- over
to every orb- and thus his account of the Intellectual Realm differs from
Plato's and, failing reason, he brings in necessity; though whatever reasons he
had alleged there would always have been the objection that it would be more
reasonable that all the spheres, as contributory to one system, should look to
a unity, to the First.
- We are obliged also to ask whether to Aristotle's mind all
Intellectual Beings spring from one, and that one their First; or whether the
Principles in the Intellectual are many.
- If from one, then clearly the Intellectual system will be analogous
to that of the universe of sense-sphere encircling sphere, with one, the
outermost, dominating all- the First [in the Intellectual] will envelop the
entire scheme and will be an Intellectual [or Archetypal] Kosmos; and as in our
universe the spheres are not empty but the first sphere is thick with stars and
none without them, so, in the Intellectual Kosmos, those principles of Movement
will envelop a multitude of Beings, and that world will be the realm of the
greater reality.
- If on the contrary each is a principle, then the effective powers
become a matter of chance; under what compulsion are they to hold together and
act with one mind towards that work of unity, the harmony of the entire
heavenly system? Again what can make it necessary that the material bodies of
the heavenly system be equal in number to the Intellectual moving principles,
and how can these incorporeal Beings be numerically many when there is no
Matter to serve as the basis of difference?
- For these reasons the ancient philosophers that ranged themselves
most closely to the school of Pythagoras and of his later followers and to that
of Pherekudes, have insisted upon this Nature, some developing the subject in
their writings while others treated of it merely in unwritten discourses, some
no doubt ignoring it entirely.
- 10. We have shown the inevitability of certain convictions as to the
scheme of things:
- There exists a Principle which transcends Being; this is The One,
whose nature we have sought to establish in so far as such matters lend
themselves to proof. Upon The One follows immediately the Principle which is at
once Being and the Intellectual-Principle. Third comes the Principle, Soul.
- Now just as these three exist for the system of Nature, so, we must
hold, they exist for ourselves. I am not speaking of the material order- all
that is separable- but of what lies beyond the sense realm in the same way as
the Primals are beyond all the heavens; I mean the corresponding aspect of man,
what Plato calls the Interior Man.
- Thus our soul, too, is a divine thing, belonging to another order
than sense; such is all that holds the rank of soul, but [above the
life-principle] there is the soul perfected as containing
Intellectual-Principle with its double phase, reasoning and giving the power to
reason. The reasoning phase of the soul, needing no bodily organ for its
thinking but maintaining, in purity, its distinctive Act that its thought may
be uncontaminated- this we cannot err in placing, separate and not mingled into
body, within the first Intellectual. We may not seek any point of space in
which to seat it; it must be set outside of all space: its distinct quality,
its separateness, its immateriality, demand that it be a thing alone, untouched
by all of the bodily order. This is why we read of the universe that the
Demiurge cast the soul around it from without- understand that phase of soul
which is permanently seated in the Intellectual- and of ourselves that the
charioteer's head reaches upwards towards the heights.
- The admonition to sever soul from body is not, of course, to be
understood spatially- that separation stands made in Nature- the reference is
to holding our rank, to use of our thinking, to an attitude of alienation from
the body in the effort to lead up and attach to the over-world, equally with
the other, that phase of soul seated here and, alone, having to do with body,
creating, moulding, spending its care upon it.
- 11. Since there is a Soul which reasons upon the right and good- for
reasoning is an enquiry into the rightness and goodness of this rather than
that- there must exist some permanent Right, the source and foundation of this
reasoning in our soul; how, else, could any such discussion be held? Further,
since the soul's attention to these matters is intermittent, there must be
within us an Intellectual-Principle acquainted with that Right not by momentary
act but in permanent possession. Similarly there must be also the principle of
this principle, its cause, God. This Highest cannot be divided and allotted,
must remain intangible but not bound to space, it may be present at many
points, wheresoever there is anything capable of accepting one of its
manifestations; thus a centre is an independent unity; everything within the
circle has its term at the centre; and to the centre the radii bring each their
own. Within our nature is such a centre by which we grasp and are linked and
held; and those of us are firmly in the Supreme whose collective tendency is
There.
- 12. Possessed of such powers, how does it happen that we do not lay
hold of them, but for the most part, let these high activities go idle- some,
even, of us never bringing them in any degree to effect?
- The answer is that all the Divine Beings are unceasingly about their
own act, the Intellectual-Principle and its Prior always self-intent; and so,
too, the soul maintains its unfailing movement; for not all that passes in the
soul is, by that fact, perceptible; we know just as much as impinges upon the
faculty of sense. Any activity not transmitted to the sensitive faculty has not
traversed the entire soul: we remain unaware because the human being includes
sense-perception; man is not merely a part [the higher part] of the soul but
the total.
- None the less every being of the order of soul is in continuous
activity as long as life holds, continuously executing to itself its
characteristic act: knowledge of the act depends upon transmission and
perception. If there is to be perception of what is thus present, we must turn
the perceptive faculty inward and hold it to attention there. Hoping to hear a
desired voice, we let all others pass and are alert for the coming at last of
that most welcome of sounds: so here, we must let the hearings of sense go by,
save for sheer necessity, and keep the soul's perception bright and quick to
the sounds from above.
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