Ennead V
Fifth tractate: That the intellectual beings are not
outside the intellectual-principle: and on the nature of the good
Written by Plotinus, 250 AD
- 1. The Intellectual-Principle, the veritably and essentially
intellective, can this be conceived as ever falling into error, ever failing to
think reality?
- Assuredly no: it would no longer be intelligent and therefore no
longer Intellectual-Principle: it must know unceasingly- and never forget; and
its knowledge can be no guesswork, no hesitating assent, no acceptance of an
alien report. Nor can it call on demonstration or, we are told it may at times
act by this or, I method, at least there must be something patent to it in
virtue of its own nature. In actual fact reason tells us that all its knowledge
is thus inherent to it, for there is no means by which to distinguish between
the spontaneous knowledge and the other. But, in any case, some knowledge, it
is conceded, is inherent to it. Whence are we to understand the certainty of
this knowledge to come to it or how do its objects carry the conviction of
their reality?
- Consider sense-knowledge: its objects seem most patently certified,
yet the doubt returns whether the apparent reality may not lie in the states of
the percipient rather than in the material before him; the decision demands
intelligence or reasoning. Besides, even granting that what the senses grasp is
really contained in the objects, none the less what is thus known by the senses
is an image: sense can never grasp the thing itself; this remains for ever
outside.
- Now, if the Intellectual-Principle in its act- that is in knowing the
intellectual- is to know these its objects as alien, we have to explain how it
makes contact with them: obviously it might never come upon them, and so might
never know them; or it might know them only upon the meeting: its knowing, at
that, would not be an enduring condition. If we are told that the
Intellectual-Principle and the Intellectual Objects are linked in a standing
unity, we demand the description of this unity.
- Next, the intellections would be impressions, that is to say not
native act but violence from without: now how is such impressing possible and
what shape could the impressions bear?
- Intellection, again, becomes at this a mere handling of the external,
exactly like sense-perception. What then distinguishes it unless that it deals
with objects of less extension? And what certitude can it have that its
knowledge is true? Or what enables it to pronounce that the object is good,
beautiful, or just, when each of these ideas is to stand apart from itself? The
very principles of judgement, by which it must be guided, would be [as Ideas]
excluded: with objects and canons alike outside it, so is truth.
- Again; either the objects of the Intellectual-Principle are senseless
and devoid of life and intellect or they are in possession of Intellect.
- Now, if they are in possession of Intellect, that realm is a union of
both and is Truth. This combined Intellectual realm will be the Primal
Intellect: we have only then to examine how this reality, conjoint of
Intellectual-Principle and its object, is to be understood, whether as
combining self-united identity with yet duality and difference, or what other
relation holds between them.
- If on the contrary the objects of Intellectual-Principle are without
intelligence and life, what are they? They cannot be premises, axioms or
predicates: as predicates they would not have real existence; they would be
affirmations linking separate entities, as when we affirm that justice is good
though justice and good are distinct realities.
- If we are told that they are self-standing entities- the distinct
beings Justice and Good- then [supposing them to be outside] the Intellectual
Realm will not be a unity nor be included in any unity: all is sundered
individuality. Where, then, are they and what spatial distinction keeps them
apart? How does the Intellectual-Principle come to meet with them as it travels
round; what keeps each true to its character; what gives them enduring
identity; what conceivable shape or character can they have? They are being
presented to us as some collection of figures, in gold or some other material
substance, the work of some unknown sculptor or graver: but at once the
Intellectual-Principle which contemplates them becomes sense-perception; and
there still remains the question how one of them comes to be Justice and
another something else.
- But the great argument is that if we are to allow that these objects
of Intellection are in the strict sense outside the Intellectual-Principle,
which, therefore, must see them as external, then inevitably it cannot possess
the truth of them.
- In all it looks upon, it sees falsely; for those objects must be the
authentic things; yet it looks upon them without containing them and in such
knowledge holds only their images; that is to say, not containing the
authentic, adopting phantasms of the true, it holds the false; it never
possesses reality. If it knows that it possesses the false, it must confess
itself excluded from the truth; if it fails of this knowledge also, imagining
itself to possess the truth which has eluded it, then the doubled falsity puts
it the deeper into error.
- It is thus, I suppose, that in sense-perception we have belief
instead of truth; belief is our lief; we satisfy ourselves with something very
different from the original which is the occasion of perception.
- In fine, there would be on the hypothesis no truth in the
Intellectual-Principle. But such an Intellectual-Principle would not be truth,
nor truly an Intellectual-Principle. There would be no Intellectual-Principle
at all [no Divine Mind]: yet elsewhere truth cannot be.
- 2. Thus we may not look for the Intellectual objects [the Ideas]
outside of the Intellectual-Principle, treating them as impressions of reality
upon it: we cannot strip it of truth and so make its objects unknowable and
non-existent and in the end annul the Intellectual-Principle itself. We must
provide for knowledge and for truth; we must secure reality; being must become
knowable essentially and not merely in that knowledge of quality which could
give us a mere image or vestige of the reality in lieu of possession, intimate
association, absorption.
- The only way to this is to leave nothing out side of the veritable
Intellectual-Principle which thus has knowledge in the true knowing [that of
identification with the object], cannot forget, need not go wandering in
search. At once truth is there, this is the seat of the authentic Existents, it
becomes living and intellective: these are the essentials of that most lofty
Principle; and, failing them, where is its worth, its grandeur?
- Only thus [by this inherence of the Ideas] is it dispensed from
demonstration and from acts of faith in the truth of its knowledge: it is its
entire self, self-perspicuous: it knows a prior by recognising its own source;
it knows a sequent to that prior by its self-identity; of the reality of this
sequent, of the fact that it is present and has authentic existence, no outer
entity can bring it surer conviction.
- Thus veritable truth is not accordance with an external; it is
self-accordance; it affirms and is nothing other than itself and is nothing
other; it is at once existence and self-affirmation. What external, then, can
call it to the question, and from what source of truth could the refutation be
brought? Any counter affirmation [of truth] must fall into identity with the
truth which first uttered itself; brought forward as new, it has to appear
before the Principle which made the earlier statement and to show itself
identical with that: for there is no finding anything truer than the true.
- 3. Thus we have here one identical Principle, the Intellect, which is
the universe of authentic beings, the Truth: as such it is a great god or,
better, not a god among gods but the Godhead entire. It is a god, a secondary
god manifesting before there is any vision of that other, the Supreme which
rests over all, enthroned in transcendence upon that splendid pediment, the
Nature following close upon it.
- The Supreme in its progress could never be borne forward upon some
soulless vehicle nor even directly upon the soul: it will be heralded by some
ineffable beauty: before the great King in his progress there comes first the
minor train, then rank by rank the greater and more exalted, closer to the King
the kinglier; next his own honoured company until, last among all these
grandeurs, suddenly appears the Supreme Monarch himself, and all- unless indeed
for those who have contented themselves with the spectacle before his coming
and gone away- prostrate themselves and hail him.
- In that royal progress the King is of another order from those that
go before him, but the King in the Supreme is no ruler over externs; he holds
that most just of governances, rooted in nature, the veritable kingship, for he
is King of Truth, holding sway by all reason over a dense offspring his own, a
host that shares his divinity, King over a king and over kings and even more
justly called father of Gods.
- [Interpolation: Zeus (Universal Soul) is in this a symbol of him,
Zeus who is not content with the contemplation of his father (Kronos, divine
Intellect) but looks to that father's father (to Ouranos, the Transcendent) as
what may be called the divine energy working to the establishment of a real
being.]
- 4. We have said that all must be brought back to a unity: this must
be an authentic unity, not belonging to the order in which multiplicity is
unified by participation in what is truly a One; we need a unity independent of
participation, not a combination in which multiplicity holds an equal place: we
have exhibited, also, the Intellectual Realm and the Intellectual-Principle as
more closely a unity than the rest of things, so that there is nothing closer
to The One. Yet even this is not The purely One.
- This purely One, essentially a unity untouched by the multiple, this
we now desire to penetrate if in any way we may.
- Only by a leap can we reach to this One which is to be pure of all
else, halting sharp in fear of slipping ever so little aside and impinging on
the dual: for if we fail of the centre, we are in a duality which does not even
include The authentic One but belongs on both sides, to the later order. The
One does not bear to be numbered in with anything else, with a one or a two or
any such quantity; it refuses to take number because it is measure and not the
measured; it is no peer of other entities to be found among them; for thus, it
and they alike would be included in some container and this would be its prior,
the prior it cannot have. Not even essential [ideal or abstract] number can
belong to The One and certainly not the still later number applying to
quantities; for essential number first appears as providing duration to the
divine Intellection, while quantitative number is that [still later and lower]
which furnishes the Quantity found in conjunction with other things or which
provides for Quantity independent of things, if this is to be thought of as
number at all. The Principle which in objects having quantitative number looks
to the unity from which they spring is a copy [or lower phase] of the Principle
which in the earlier order of number [in essential or ideal number] looks to
the veritable One; and it attains its existence without in the least degree
dissipating or shattering that prior unity: the dyad has come into being, but
the precedent monad still stands; and this monad is quite distinct within the
dyad from either of the two constituent unities, since there is nothing to make
it one rather than the other: being neither, but simply that thing apart, it is
present without being inherent.
- But how are the two unities distinct and how is the dyad a unity, and
is this unity the same as the unity by which each of the constituents is one
thing?
- Our answer must be that the unity is that of a participation in the
primal unity with the participants remaining distinct from that in which they
partake; the dyad, in so far as it is one thing, has this participation, but in
a certain degree only; the unity of an army is not that of a single building;
the dyad, as a thing of extension, is not strictly a unit either quantitatively
or in manner of being.
- Are we then to take it that the monads in the pentad and decad differ
while the unity in the pentad is the same as that in the decad?
- Yes, in the sense in which, big and little, ship is one with ship,
army with army, city with city; otherwise, no. But certain difficulties in this
matter will be dealt with later.
- 5. We return to our statement that The First remains intact even when
other entities spring from it.
- In the case of numbers, the unit remains intact while something else
produces, and thus number arises in dependence on the unit: much more then does
the unit, The One, remain intact in the principle which is before all beings;
especially since the entities produced in its likeness, while it thus remains
intact, owe their existence to no other, but to its own all-sufficient power.
- And just as there is, primarily or secondarily, some form or idea
from the monad in each of the successive numbers- the later still
participating, though unequally, in the unit- so the series of Beings following
upon The First bear, each, some form or idea derived from that source. In
Number the participation establishes Quantity; in the realm of Being, the trace
of The One establishes reality: existence is a trace of The One- our word for
entity may probably be connected with that for unity.
- What we know as Being, the first sequent upon The One, advanced a
little outward, so to speak, then chose to go no further, turned inward again
and comes to rest and is now the reality and hearth [ousia and hestia] of the
universe. Pressing [with the rough breathing] on the word for Being [on] we
have the word "hen" [one], an indication that in our very form of speech we
tell, as far as may be, that Being [the weaker] is that which proceeds from
[the stronger] The One. Thus both the thing that comes to be and Being itself
are carriers of a copy, since they are outflows from the power of The primal
One: this power sees and in its emotion tries to represent what it sees and
breaks into speech "On"; "einai"; "ousia," "hestia" [Existent: Existence:
Essence: Hestia or Hearth], sounds which labour to express the essential nature
of the universe produced by the travail of the utterer and so to represent, as
far as sounds may, the origin of reality.
- 6. All this, however, we may leave to individual judgement: to
proceed:
- This produced reality is an Ideal form- for certainly nothing
springing from the Supreme can be less- and it is not a particular form but the
form of all, beside which there is no other; it follows that The First must be
without form, and, if without form, then it is no Being; Being must have some
definition and therefore be limited; but the First cannot be thought of as
having definition and limit, for thus it would be not the Source but the
particular item indicated by the definition assigned to it. If all things
belong to the produced, which of them can be thought of as the Supreme? Not
included among them, this can be described only as transcending them: but they
are Being and the Beings; it therefore transcends Being.
- Note that the phrase transcending Being assigns no character, makes
no assertion, allots no name, carries only the denial of particular being; and
in this there is no attempt to circumscribe it: to seek to throw a line about
that illimitable Nature would be folly, and anyone thinking to do so cuts
himself off from any slightest and most momentary approach to its least
vestige.
- As one wishing to contemplate the Intellectual Nature will lay aside
all the representations of sense and so may see what transcends the
sense-realm, in the same way one wishing to contemplate what transcends the
Intellectual attains by putting away all that is of the intellect, taught by
the intellect, no doubt, that the Transcendent exists but never seeking to
define it.
- Its definition, in fact, could be only "the indefinable": what is not
a thing is not some definite thing. We are in agony for a true expression; we
are talking of the untellable; we name, only to indicate for our own use as
best we may. And this name, The One, contains really no more than the negation
of plurality: under the same pressure the Pythagoreans found their indication
in the symbol "Apollo" [a= not; pollon= of many] with its repudiation of the
multiple. If we are led to think positively of The One, name and thing, there
would be more truth in silence: the designation, a mere aid to enquiry, was
never intended for more than a preliminary affirmation of absolute simplicity
to be followed by the rejection of even that statement: it was the best that
offered, but remains inadequate to express the Nature indicated. For this is a
principle not to be conveyed by any sound; it cannot be known on any hearing
but, if at all, by vision; and to hope in that vision to see a form is to fail
of even that.
- 7. Consider the act of ocular vision:
- There are two elements here; there is the form perceptible to the
sense and there is the medium by which the eye sees that form. This medium is
itself perceptible to the eye, distinct from the form to be seen, but the cause
of the seeing; it is perceived at the one stroke in that form and on it and,
hence, is not distinguished from it, the eye being held entirely by the
illuminated object. When on the contrary this medium presents itself alone it
is seen directly- though even then actual sight demands some solid base; there
must be something besides the medium which, unless embracing some object,
eludes perception; thus the light inherent to the sun would not be perceived
but for the solidity of the mass. If it is objected that the sun is light
entire, this would only be a proof of our assertion: no other visible form will
contain light which must, then, have no other property than that of visibility,
and in fact all other visible objects are something more than light alone.
- So it is with the act of vision in the Intellectual Principle.
- This vision sees, by another light, the objects illuminated by the
First Principle: setting itself among them, it sees veritably; declining
towards the lower Nature, that upon which the light from above rests, it has
less of that vision. Passing over the visible and looking to the medium by
which it sees, then it holds the Light and the source of Light.
- But since the Intellectual-Principle is not to see this light as
something external we return to our analogy; the eye is not wholly dependent
upon an outside and alien light; there is an earlier light within itself, a
more brilliant, which it sees sometimes in a momentary flash. At night in the
darkness a gleam leaps from within the eye: or again we make no effort to see
anything; the eyelids close; yet a light flashes before us; or we rub the eye
and it sees the light it contains. This is sight without the act, but it is the
truest seeing, for it sees light whereas its other objects were the lit not the
light.
- It is certainly thus that the Intellectual-Principle, hiding itself
from all the outer, withdrawing to the inmost, seeing nothing, must have its
vision- not of some other light in some other thing but of the light within
itself, unmingled, pure, suddenly gleaming before it;
- 8. So that we are left wondering whence it came, from within or
without; and when it has gone, we say, "It was here. Yet no; it was beyond!"
But we ought not to question whence; there is no whence, no coming or going in
place; now it is seen and now not seen. We must not run after it, but fit
ourselves for the vision and then wait tranquilly for its appearance, as the
eye waits on the rising of the sun, which in its own time appears above the
horizon- out of the ocean, as the poets say- and gives itself to our sight.
- This Principle, of which the sun is an image, where has it its
dawning, what horizon does it surmount to appear?
- It stands immediately above the contemplating Intellect which has
held itself at rest towards the vision, looking to nothing else than the good
and beautiful, setting its entire being to that in a perfect surrender, and now
tranquilly filled with power and taking a new beauty to itself, gleaming in the
light of that presence.
- This advent, still, is not by expectation: it is a coming without
approach; the vision is not of something that must enter but of something
present before all else, before the Intellect itself made any movement. Yet it
is the Intellect that must move, to come and to go- going because it has not
known where it should stay and where that presence stays, the nowhere
contained.
- And if the Intellect, too, could hold itself in that nowhere- not
that it is ever in place; it too is uncontained, utterly unplaced- it would
remain for ever in the vision of its prior, or, indeed, not in vision but in
identity, all duality annulled. But it is Intellect [having a sphere of its
own] and, when it is to see, it must see by that in it which is not Intellect
[by its divinest power].
- No doubt it is wonderful that The First should thus be present
without any coming, and that, while it is nowhere, nowhere is it not; but
wonderful though this be in itself, the contrary would be more wonderful to
those who know. Of course neither this contrary nor the wonder at it can be
entertained. But we must explain:
- 9. Everything brought into being under some principle not itself is
contained either within its maker or, if there is any intermediate, within
that: having a prior essential to its being, it needs that prior always,
otherwise it would not be contained at all. It is the order of nature: The last
in the immediately preceding lasts, things of the order of the Firsts within
their prior-firsts, and so thing within thing up to the very pinnacle of
source.
- That Source, having no prior, cannot be contained: uncontained by any
of those other forms of being, each held within the series of priors, it is
orbed round all, but so as not to be pointed off to hold them part for part; it
possesses but is not possessed. Holding all- though itself nowhere held- it is
omnipresent, for where its presence failed something would elude its hold. At
the same time, in the sense that it is nowhere held, it is not present: thus it
is both present and not present; not present as not being circumscribed by
anything; yet, as being utterly unattached, not inhibited from presence at any
point. That inhibition would mean that the First was determined by some other
being; the later series, then, would be without part in the Supreme; God has
His limit and is no longer self-governed but mastered by inferiors.
- While the contained must be where its container is, what is
uncontained by place is not debarred from any: for, imagine a place where it is
not and evidently some other place retains it; at once it is contained and
there is an end of its placelessness.
- But if the "nowhere" is to stand and the ascription of a "where,"
implying station in the extern, is to fall, then nothing can be left void; and
at once- nothing void, yet no point containing- God is sovereignly present
through all. We cannot think of something of God here and something else there,
nor of all God gathered at some one spot: there is an instantaneous presence
everywhere, nothing containing and nothing left void, everything therefore
fully held by the divine.
- Consider our universe. There is none before it and therefore it is
not, itself, in a universe or in any place- what place was there before the
universe came to be?- its linked members form and occupy the whole. But Soul is
not in the universe, on the contrary the universe is in the Soul; bodily
substance is not a place to the Soul; Soul is contained in
Intellectual-Principle and is the container of body. The Intellectual-Principle
in turn is contained in something else; but that prior principle has nothing in
which to be: the First is therefore in nothing, and, therefore, nowhere. But
all the rest must be somewhere; and where but in the First?
- This can mean only that the First is neither remote from things nor
directly within them; there is nothing containing it; it contains all. It is
The Good to the universe if only in this way, that towards it all things have
their being, all dependent upon it, each in its mode, so that thing rises above
thing in goodness according to its fuller possession of authentic being.
- 10. Still, do not, I urge you, look for The Good through any of these
other things; if you do, you will see not itself but its trace: you must form
the idea of that which is to be grasped cleanly standing to itself not in any
combination, the unheld in which all have hold: for no other is such, yet one
such there must be.
- Now it is clear that we cannot possess ourselves of the power of this
principle in its concentrated fulness: so to do one must be identical with it:
but some partial attainment is within our reach.
- You who make the venture will throw forward all your being but you
will never tell it entire- for that, you must yourself be the divine Intellect
in Act- and at your utmost success it will still pass from you or, rather, you
from it. In ordinary vision you may think to see the object entire: in this
intellective act, all, less or more, that you can take to mind you may set down
as The Good.
- It is The Good since, being a power [being effective outwardly], it
is the cause of the intelligent and intellective life as of life and intellect:
for these grow from it as from the source of essence and of existence, the
Source as being One, simplex and first because before it was nothing. All
derives from this: it is the origin of the primal movement which it does not
possess and of the repose which is but its absence of need; for neither rest
nor movement can belong to that which has no place in which either could occur;
centre, object, ground, all are alike unknown to it, for it is before all. Yet
its Being is not limited; what is there to set bounds to it? Nor, on the other
hand, is it infinite in the sense of magnitude; what place can there be to
which it must extend, or why should there be movement where there is no
lacking? All its infinitude resides in its power: it does not change and will
not fail; and in it all that is unfailing finds duration.
- 11. It is infinite also by right of being a pure unity with nothing
towards which to direct any partial content. Absolutely One, it has never known
measure and stands outside of number, and so is under no limit either in regard
to any extern or within itself; for any such determination would bring
something of the dual into it. And having no constituent parts it accepts no
pattern, forms no shape.
- Reason recognising it as such a nature, you may not hope to see it
with mortal eyes, nor in any way that would be imagined by those who make sense
the test of reality and so annul the supremely real. For what passes for the
most truly existent is most truly non-existent- the thing of extension least
real of all- while this unseen First is the source and principle of Being and
sovereign over Reality.
- You must turn appearances about or you will be left void of God. You
will be like those at the festivals who in their gluttony cram themselves with
things which none going to the gods may touch; they hold these goods to be more
real than the vision of the God who is to be honoured and they go away having
had no share in the sanctities of the shrine.
- In these celebrations of which we speak, the unseen god leaves those
in doubt of his existence who think nothing patent but what may be known to the
flesh: it happens as if a man slept a life through and took the dream world in
perfect trust; wake him, and he would refuse belief to the report of his open
eyes and settle down to sleep again.
- 12. Knowing demands the organ fitted to the object; eyes for one
kind, ears for another: similarly some things, we must believe, are to be known
by the Intellectual-Principle in us. We must not confuse intellection with
hearing or seeing; this would be trying to look with the ears or denying sound
because it is not seen. Certain people, we must keep in mind, have forgotten
that to which, from the beginning onwards, their longing and effort are
pointed: for all that exists desires and aspires towards the Supreme by a
compulsion of nature, as if all had received the oracle that without it they
cannot be.
- The perception of Beauty and the awe and the stirring of passion
towards it are for those already in some degree knowing and awakened: but the
Good, as possessed long since and setting up a natural tendency, is inherently
present to even those asleep and brings them no wonder when some day they see
it, since it is no occasional reminiscence but is always with them though in
their drowse they are not aware of it: the love of Beauty on the contrary sets
up pain when it appears, for those that have seen it must pursue. This love of
Beauty then is later than the love of Good and comes with a more sophisticated
understanding; hence we know that Beauty is a secondary: the more primal
appetition, not patent to sense, our movement towards our good, gives witness
that The Good is the earlier, the prior.
- Again; all that have possessed themselves of The Good feel it
sufficient: they have attained the end: but Beauty not all have known and those
that have judge it to exist for itself and not for them, as in the charm of
this world the beauty belongs only to its possessor.
- Then, too, it is thought enough to appear loveable whether one is so
or not: but no one wants his Good in semblance only. All are seeking The First
as something ranking before aught else, but they struggle venomously for beauty
as something secondary like themselves: thus some minor personage may perhaps
challenge equal honour with the King's right-hand man on pretext of similar
dependence, forgetting that, while both owe their standing to the monarch, the
other holds the higher rank.
- The source of the error is that while both The Good and The Beautiful
participate in the common source, The One precedes both; and that, in the
Supreme also, The Good has no need of The Beautiful, while the Beautiful does
need The Good.
- The Good is gentle and friendly and tender, and we have it present
when we but will. Beauty is all violence and stupefaction; its pleasure is
spoiled with pain, and it even draws the thoughtless away from The Good as some
attraction will lure the child from the father's side: these things tell of
youth. The Good is the older- not in time but by degree of reality- and it has
the higher and earlier power, all power in fact, for the sequent holds only a
power subordinate and delegated of which the prior remains sovereign.
- Not that God has any need of His derivatives: He ignores all that
produced realm, never necessary to Him, and remains identically what He was
before He brought it into being. So too, had the secondary never existed, He
would have been unconcerned, exactly as He would not have grudged existence to
any other universe that might spring into being from Him, were any such
possible; of course no other such could be since there is nothing that has not
existence once the All exists.
- But God never was the All; that would make Him dependent upon the
universe: transcending all, He was able at once to make all things and to leave
them to their own being, He above.
- 13. The Supreme, as the Absolute Good and not merely a good being or
thing, can contain nothing, since there is nothing that could be its good.
- Anything it could contain must be either good to it or not good; but
in the supremely and primally Good there can be nothing not good; nor can the
Absolute Good be a container to the Good: containing, then, neither the good
nor the not good it contains nothing and, containing nothing, it is alone: it
is void of all but itself.
- If the rest of being either is good- without being the absolute good-
or is not good, while on the other hand the Supreme contains neither what is
good nor what is not good, then, containing nothing, it is The Good by that
very absence of content.
- Thus we rob it of its very being as The Absolute Good if we ascribe
anything to it, existence or intellect or goodness. The only way is to make
every denial and no assertion, to feign no quality or content there but to
permit only the "It is" in which we pretend to no affirmation of non-existent
attribute: there is an ignorant praise which, missing the true description,
drags in qualities beneath the real worth and so abases; philosophy must guard
against attaching to the Supreme what is later and lower: moving above all that
order, it is the cause and source of all these, and is none of them.
- For, once more, the nature of the Good is not such as to make it all
things or a thing among all: that would range it under the same classification
with them all and it would differ, thus, only by its individual quality, some
specialty, some addition. At once it becomes not a unity but a duality; there
is one common element not good and another element that is good; but a
combination so made up of good and not good cannot be the purely good, the
primarily good; the primarily good must be that principle in which the better
element has more effectively participated and so attained its goodness. Any
good thing has become so by communion; but that in which it has communion is
not a thing among the things of the all; therefore the Good is not a thing of
the All.
- Since there is this Good in any good thing- the specific difference
by which the combination becomes good- it must enter from elsewhere than the
world of things: that source must be a Good absolute and isolated.
- Thus is revealed to us the Primarily existent, the Good, above all
that has being, good unalloyed, containing nothing in itself, utterly
unmingling, all-transcending, cause of all.
- Certainly neither Being nor Beauty springs from evil or from the
neutral; the maker, as the more consummate, must surpass the made.
Essene Nazarean Church of Mount Carmel
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