Ennead VI
Second tractate: On the kinds of being (2)
Written by Plotinus, 250 AD
- 1. We have examined the proposed "ten genera": we have discussed also
the theory which gathers the total of things into one genus and to this
subordinates what may be thought of as its four species. The next step is,
naturally, to expound our own views and to try to show the agreement of our
conclusions with those of Plato.
- Now if we were obliged to consider Being as a unity, the following
questions would be unnecessary:
- Is there one genus embracing everything, or are there genera which
cannot be subsumed under such a unity? Are there first-principles? Are
first-principles to be identified with genera, or genera with first-principles?
Or is it perhaps rather the case that while not all genera are
first-principles, all first-principles are at the same time genera? Or is the
converse true? Or again, do both classes overlap, some principles being also
genera, and some genera also principles? And do both the sets of categories we
have been examining imply that only some principles are genera and some genera
principles? or does one of them presuppose that all that belongs to the class
of genera belongs also to the class of principles?
- Since, however, we affirm that Being is not a unity- the reason for
this affirmation is stated by Plato and others- these questions become
imperative, once we are satisfied as to the number of genera to be posited and
the grounds for our choice.
- The subject of our enquiry, then, is the Existent or Existents, and
it presents immediately two problems demanding separate analysis:
- What do we mean by the Existent? This is naturally the first question
to be examined.
- What is that which, often taken for Being [for the Existent], is in
our view Becoming and never really Being? Note however that these concepts are
not to be taken as distinguished from each other in the sense of belonging to a
genus, Something, divided into Being and Becoming; and we must not suppose that
Plato took this view. It would be absurd to assign Being to the same genus as
non-Being: this would be to make one genus of Socrates and his portrait. The
division here [between what has Being and what is in Becoming] means a definite
marking-off, a setting asunder, leading to the assertion that what takes the
appearance of Being is not Being and implying that the nature of True Being has
been quite misapprehended. Being, we are taught, must have the attribute of
eternity, must be so constituted as never to belie its own nature.
- This, then, is the Being of which we shall treat, and in our
investigation we shall assume that it is not a unity: subsequently we ask leave
to say something on the nature of Becoming and on what it is that comes to be,
that is, on the nature of the world of Sense.
- 2. In asserting that Being is not a unity, we do not mean to imply a
definite number of existences; the number may well be infinite: we mean simply
that it is many as well as one, that it is, so to speak, a diversified unity, a
plurality in unity.
- It follows that either the unity so regarded is a unity of genus
under which the Existents, involving as they do plurality as well as unity,
stand as species; or that while there are more genera than one, yet all are
subordinate to a unity; or there may be more genera than one, though no one
genus is subordinate to any other, but all with their own subordinates- whether
these be lesser genera, or species with individuals for their subordinates- all
are elements in one entity, and from their totality the Intellectual realm-
that which we know as Being- derives its constitution.
- If this last is the truth, we have here not merely genera, but genera
which are at the same time principles of Being. They are genera because they
have subordinates- other genera, and successively species and individuals; they
are also principles, since from this plurality Being takes its rise,
constituted in its entirety from these its elements.
- Suppose, however, a greater number of origins which by their mere
totality comprised, without possessing any subordinates, the whole of Being;
these would be first-principles but not genera: it would be as if one
constructed the sensible world from the four elements- fire and the others;
these elements would be first principles, but they would not be genera, unless
the term "genus" is to be used equivocally.
- But does this assertion of certain genera which are at the same time
first-principles imply that by combining the genera, each with its
subordinates, we find the whole of Being in the resultant combination? But
then, taken separately, their existence will not be actual but only potential,
and they will not be found in isolation.
- Suppose, on the other hand, we ignore the genera and combine the
particulars: what then becomes of the ignored genera? They will, surely, exist
in the purity of their own isolation, and the mixtures will not destroy them.
The question of how this result is achieved may be postponed.
- For the moment we take it as agreed that there are genera as distinct
from principles of Being and that, on another plane, principles [elements] are
opposed to compounds. We are thus obliged to show in what relation we speak of
genera and why we distinguish them instead of summing them under a unity; for
otherwise we imply that their coalescence into a unity is fortuitous, whereas
it would be more plausible to dispense with their separate existence.
- If all the genera could be species of Being, all individuals without
exception being immediately subordinate to these species, then such a
unification becomes feasible. But that supposition bespeaks annihilation for
the genera: the species will no longer be species; plurality will no longer be
subordinated to unity; everything must be the unity, unless there exist some
thing or things outside the unity. The One never becomes many- as the existence
of species demands- unless there is something distinct from it: it cannot of
itself assume plurality, unless we are to think of it as being broken into
pieces like some extended body: but even so, the force which breaks it up must
be distinct from it: if it is itself to effect the breaking up- or whatever
form the division may take- then it is itself previously divided.
- For these and many other reasons we must abstain from positing a
single genus, and especially because neither Being nor Substance can be the
predicate of any given thing. If we do predicate Being, it is only as an
accidental attribute; just as when we predicate whiteness of a substance, we
are not predicating the Absolute Whiteness.
- 3. We assert, then, a plurality of Existents, but a plurality not
fortuitous and therefore a plurality deriving from a unity.
- But even admitting this derivation from a unity- a unity however not
predicated of them in respect of their essential being- there is, surely, no
reason why each of these Existents, distinct in character from every other,
should not in itself stand as a separate genus.
- Is, then, this unity external to the genera thus produced, this unity
which is their source though it cannot be predicated of them in respect of
their essence? it is indeed external; the One is beyond; it cannot, therefore,
be included among the genera: it is the [transcendent] source, while they stand
side by side as genera. Yet surely the one must somehow be included [among the
genera]? No: it is the Existents we are investigating, not that which is beyond
Existence.
- We pass on, then, to consider that which is included, and find to our
surprise the cause included with the things it causes: it is surely strange
that causes and effects should be brought into the same genus.
- But if the cause is included with its effects only in the sense in
which a genus is included with its subordinates, the subordinates being of a
different order, so that it cannot be predicated of them whether as their genus
or in any other relation, these subordinates are obviously themselves genera
with subordinates of their own: you may, for example, be the cause of the
operation of walking, but the walking is not subordinate to you in the relation
of species to genus; and if walking had nothing prior to it as its genus, but
had posteriors, then it would be a [primary] genus and rank among the
Existents.
- Perhaps, however, it must be utterly denied that unity is even the
cause of other things; they should be considered rather as its parts or
elements- if the terms may be allowed,- their totality constituting a single
entity which our thinking divides. All unity though it be, it goes by a
wonderful power out into everything; it appears as many and becomes many when
there is a motion; the fecundity of its nature causes the One to be no longer
one, and we, displaying what we call its parts, consider them each as a unity
and make them into "genera," unaware of our failure to see the whole at once.
We display it, then, in parts, though, unable to restrain their natural
tendency to coalesce, we bring these parts together again, resign them to the
whole and allow them to become a unity, or rather to be a unity.
- All this will become clearer in the light of further consideration-
when, that is to say, we have ascertained the number of the genera; for thus we
shall also discover their causes. It is not enough to deny; we must advance by
dint of thought and comprehension. The way is clear:
- 4. If we had to ascertain the nature of body and the place it holds
in the universe, surely we should take some sample of body, say stone, and
examine into what constituents it may be divided. There would be what we think
of as the substrate of stone, its quantity- in this case, a magnitude; its
quality- for example, the colour of stone. As with stone, so with every other
body: we should see that in this thing, body, there are three distinguishable
characteristics- the pseudo-substance, the quantity, the quality- though they
all make one and are only logically trisected, the three being found to
constitute the unit thing, body. If motion were equally inherent in its
constitution, we should include this as well, and the four would form a unity,
the single body depending upon them all for its unity and characteristic
nature.
- The same method must be applied in examining the Intellectual
Substance and the genera and first-principles of the Intellectual sphere.
- But we must begin by subtracting what is peculiar to body, its
coming-to-be, its sensible nature, its magnitude- that is to say, the
characteristics which produce isolation and mutual separation. It is an
Intellectual Being we have to consider, an Authentic Existent, possessed of a
unity surpassing that of any sensible thing.
- Now the wonder comes how a unity of this type can be many as well as
one. In the case of body it was easy to concede unity-with-plurality; the one
body is divisible to infinity; its colour is a different thing from its shape,
since in fact they are separated. But if we take Soul, single, continuous,
without extension, of the highest simplicity- as the first effort of the mind
makes manifest- how can we expect to find multiplicity here too? We believed
that the division of the living being into body and soul was final: body indeed
was manifold, composite, diversified; but in soul we imagined we had found a
simplex, and boldly made a halt, supposing that we had come to the limit of our
course.
- Let us examine this soul, presented to us from the Intellectual realm
as body from the Sensible. How is its unity a plurality? How is its plurality a
unity? Clearly its unity is not that of a composite formed from diverse
elements, but that of a single nature comprising a plurality.
- This problem attacked and solved, the truth about the genera
comprised in Being will thereby, as we asserted, be elucidated also.
- 5. A first point demanding consideration:
- Bodies- those, for example, of animals and plants- are each a
multiplicity founded on colour and shape and magnitude, and on the forms and
arrangement of parts: yet all these elements spring from a unity. Now this
unity must be either Unity-Absolute or some unity less thorough-going and
complete, but necessarily more complete than that which emerges, so to speak,
from the body itself; this will be a unity having more claim to reality than
the unity produced from it, for divergence from unity involves a corresponding
divergence from Reality. Since, thus, bodies take their rise from unity, but
not "unity" in the sense of the complete unity or Unity-Absolute- for this
could never yield discrete plurality- it remains that they be derived from a
unity Pluralized. But the creative principle [in bodies] is Soul: Soul
therefore is a pluralized unity.
- We then ask whether the plurality here consists of the
Reason-Principles of the things of process. Or is this unity not something
different from the mere sum of these Principles? Certainly Soul itself is one
Reason-Principle, the chief of the Reason-Principles, and these are its Act as
it functions in accordance with its essential being; this essential being, on
the other hand, is the potentiality of the Reason-Principles. This is the mode
in which this unity is a plurality, its plurality being revealed by the effect
it has upon the external.
- But, to leave the region of its effect, suppose we take it at the
higher non-effecting part of Soul; is not plurality of powers to be found in
this part also? The existence of this higher part will, we may presume, be at
once conceded.
- But is this existence to be taken as identical with that of the
stone? Surely not. Being in the case of the stone is not Being pure and simple,
but stone-being: so here; Soul's being denotes not merely Being but Soul-being.
- Is then that "being" distinct from what else goes to complete the
essence [or substance] of Soul? Is it to be identified with Bring [the
Absolute], while to some differentia of Being is ascribed the production of
Soul? No doubt Soul is in a sense Being, and this is not as a man "is" white,
but from the fact of its being purely an essence: in other words, the being it
possesses it holds from no source external to its own essence.
- 6. But must it not draw on some source external to its essence, if it
is to be conditioned, not only by Being, but by being an entity of a particular
character? But if it is conditioned by a particular character, and this
character is external to its essence, its essence does not comprise all that
makes it Soul; its individuality will determine it; a part of Soul will be
essence, but not Soul entire.
- Furthermore, what being will it have when we separate it from its
other components? The being of a stone? No: the being must be a form of Being
appropriate to a source, so to speak, and a first-principle, or rather must
take the forms appropriate to all that is comprised in Soul's being: the being
here must, that is, be life, and the life and the being must be one.
- One, in the sense of being one Reason-Principle? No; it is the
substrate of Soul that is one, though one in such a way as to be also two or
more- as many as are the Primaries which constitute Soul. Either, then, it is
life as well as Substance, or else it possesses life.
- But if life is a thing possessed, the essence of the possessor is not
inextricably bound up with life. If, on the contrary, this is not possession,
the two, life and Substance, must be a unity.
- Soul, then, is one and many- as many as are manifested in that
oneness- one in its nature, many in those other things. A single Existent, it
makes itself many by what we may call its motion: it is one entire, but by its
striving, so to speak, to contemplate itself, it is a plurality; for we may
imagine that it cannot bear to be a single Existent, when it has the power to
be all that it in fact is. The cause of its appearing as many is this
contemplation, and its purpose is the Act of the Intellect; if it were
manifested as a bare unity, it could have no intellection, since in that
simplicity it would already be identical with the object of its thought.
- 7. What, then, are the several entities observable in this plurality?
- We have found Substance [Essence] and life simultaneously present in
Soul. Now, this Substance is a common property of Soul, but life, common to all
souls, differs in that it is a property of Intellect also.
- Having thus introduced Intellect and its life we make a single genus
of what is common to all life, namely, Motion. Substance and the Motion, which
constitutes the highest life, we must consider as two genera; for even though
they form a unity, they are separable to thought which finds their unity not a
unity; otherwise, it could not distinguish them.
- Observe also how in other things Motion or life is clearly separated
from Being- a separation impossible, doubtless, in True Being, but possible in
its shadow and namesake. In the portrait of a man much is left out, and above
all the essential thing, life: the "Being" of sensible things just such a
shadow of True Being, an abstraction from that Being complete which was life in
the Archetype; it is because of this incompleteness that we are able in the
Sensible world to separate Being from life and life from Being.
- Being, then, containing many species, has but one genus. Motion,
however, is to be classed as neither a subordinate nor a supplement of Being
but as its concomitant; for we have not found Being serving as substrate to
Motion. Motion is being Act; neither is separated from the other except in
thought; the two natures are one; for Being is inevitably actual, not
potential.
- No doubt we observe Motion and Being separately, Motion as contained
in Being and Being as involved in Motion, and in the individual they may be
mutually exclusive; but the dualism is an affirmation of our thought only, and
that thought sees either form as a duality within a unity.
- Now Motion, thus manifested in conjunction with Being, does not alter
Being's nature- unless to complete its essential character- and it does retain
for ever its own peculiar nature: at once, then, we are forced to introduce
Stability. To reject Stability would be more unreasonable than to reject
Motion; for Stability is associated in our thought and conception with Being
even more than with Motion; unalterable condition, unchanging mode, single
Reason-Principle- these are characteristics of the higher sphere.
- Stability, then, may also be taken as a single genus. Obviously
distinct from Motion and perhaps even its contrary, that it is also distinct
from Being may be shown by many considerations. We may especially observe that
if Stability were identical with Being, so also would Motion be, with equal
right. Why identity in the case of Stability and not in that of Motion, when
Motion is virtually the very life and Act both of Substance and of Absolute
Being? However, on the very same principle on which we separated Motion from
Being with the understanding that it is the same and not the same- that they
are two and yet one- we also separate Stability from Being, holding it, yet,
inseparable; it is only a logical separation entailing the inclusion among the
Existents of this other genus. To identify Stability with Being, with no
difference between them, and to identify Being with Motion, would be to
identify Stability with Motion through the mediation of Being, and so to make
Motion and Stability one and the same thing.
- 8. We cannot indeed escape positing these three, Being, Motion,
Stability, once it is the fact that the Intellect discerns them as separates;
and if it thinks of them at all, it posits them by that very thinking; if they
are thought, they exist. Things whose existence is bound up with Matter have no
being in the Intellect: these three principles are however free of Matter; and
in that which goes free of Matter to be thought is to be.
- We are in the presence of Intellect undefiled. Fix it firmly, but not
with the eyes of the body. You are looking upon the hearth of Reality, within
it a sleepless light: you see how it holds to itself, and how it puts apart
things that were together, how it lives a life that endures and keeps a thought
acting not upon any future but upon that which already is, upon an eternal
present- a thought self-centred, bearing on nothing outside of itself.
- Now in the Act of Intellect there are energy and motion; in its
self-intellection Substance and Being. In virtue of its Being it thinks, and it
thinks of itself as Being, and of that as Being, upon which it is, so to speak,
pivoted. Not that its Act self-directed ranks as Substance, but Being stands as
the goal and origin of that Act, the object of its contemplation though not the
contemplation itself: and yet this Act too involves Being, which is its motive
and its term. By the fact that its Being is actual and not merely potential,
Intellect bridges the dualism [of agent and patient] and abjures separation: it
identifies itself with Being and Being with itself.
- Being, the most firmly set of all things, that in virtue of which all
other things receive Stability, possesses this Stability not as from without
but as springing within, as inherent. Stability is the goal of intellection, a
Stability which had no beginning, and the state from which intellection was
impelled was Stability, though Stability gave it no impulsion; for Motion
neither starts from Motion nor ends in Motion. Again, the Form-Idea has
Stability, since it is the goal of Intellect: intellection is the Form's
Motion.
- Thus all the Existents are one, at once Motion and Stability; Motion
and Stability are genera all-pervading, and every subsequent is a particular
being, a particular stability and a particular motion.
- We have caught the radiance of Being, and beheld it in its three
manifestations: Being, revealed by the Being within ourselves; the Motion of
Being, revealed by the motion within ourselves; and its Stability revealed by
ours. We accommodate our being, motion, stability to those [of the Archetypal],
unable however to draw any distinction but finding ourselves in the presence of
entities inseparable and, as it were, interfused. We have, however, in a sense,
set them a little apart, holding them down and viewing them in isolation; and
thus we have observed Being, Stability, Motion- these three, of which each is a
unity to itself; in so doing, have we not regarded them as being different from
each other? By this posing of three entities, each a unity, we have, surely,
found Being to contain Difference.
- Again, inasmuch as we restore them to an all-embracing unity,
identifying all with unity, do we not see in this amalgamation Identity
emerging as a Real Existent?
- Thus, in addition to the other three [Being, Motion, Stability], we
are obliged to posit the further two, Identity and Difference, so that we have
in all five genera. In so doing, we shall not withhold Identity and Difference
from the subsequents of the Intellectual order; the thing of Sense has, it is
clear, a particular identity and a particular difference, but Identity and
Difference have the generic status independently of the particular.
- They will, moreover, be primary genera, because nothing can be
predicated of them as denoting their essential nature. Nothing, of course we
mean, but Being; but this Being is not their genus, since they cannot be
identified with any particular being as such. Similarly, Being will not stand
as genus to Motion or Stability, for these also are not its species. Beings [or
Existents] comprise not merely what are to be regarded as species of the genus
Being, but also participants in Being. On the other hand, Being does not
participate in the other four principles as its genera: they are not prior to
Being; they do not even attain to its level.
- 9. The above considerations- to which others, doubtless, might be
added- suffice to show that these five are primary genera. But that they are
the only primary genera, that there are no others, how can we be confident of
this? Why do we not add unity to them? Quantity? Quality? Relation, and all
else included by our various forerunners?
- As for unity: If the term is to mean a unity in which nothing else is
present, neither Soul nor Intellect nor anything else, this can be predicated
of nothing, and therefore cannot be a genus. If it denotes the unity present in
Being, in which case we predicate Being of unity, this unity is not primal.
- Besides, unity, containing no differences, cannot produce species,
and not producing species, cannot be a genus. You cannot so much as divide
unity: to divide it would be to make it many. Unity, aspiring to be a genus,
becomes a plurality and annuls itself.
- Again, you must add to it to divide it into species; for there can be
no differentiae in unity as there are in Substance. The mind accepts
differences of Being, but differences within unity there cannot be. Every
differentia introduces a duality destroying the unity; for the addition of any
one thing always does away with the previous quantity.
- It may be contended that the unity which is implicit in Being and in
Motion is common to all other things, and that therefore Being and unity are
inseparable. But we rejected the idea that Being is a genus comprising all
things, on the ground that these things are not beings in the sense of the
Absolute Being, but beings in another mode: in the same way, we assert, unity
is not a genus, the Primary Unity having a character distinct from all other
unities.
- Admitted that not everything suffices to produce a genus, it may yet
be urged that there is an Absolute or Primary Unity corresponding to the other
primaries. But if Being and unity are identified, then since Being has already
been included among the genera, it is but a name that is introduced in unity:
if, however, they are both unity, some principle is implied: if there is
anything in addition [to this principle], unity is predicated of this added
thing; if there is nothing added, the reference is again to that unity
predicated of nothing. If however the unity referred to is that which
accompanies Being, we have already decided that it is not unity in the primary
sense.
- But is there any reason why this less complete unity should not still
possess Primary Being, seeing that even its posterior we rank as Being, and
"Being" in the sense of the Primary Being? The reason is that the prior of this
Being cannot itself be Being- or else, if the prior is Being, this is not
Primary Being: but the prior is unity; [therefore unity is not Being].
- Furthermore, unity, abstracted from Being, has no differentiae.
- Again, even taking it as bound up with Being: If it is a consequent
of Being, then it is a consequent of everything, and therefore the latest of
things: but the genus takes priority. If it is simultaneous with Being, it is
simultaneous with everything: but a genus is not thus simultaneous. If it is
prior to Being, it is of the nature of a Principle, and therefore will belong
only to Being; but if it serves as Principle to Being, it is not its genus: if
it is not genus to Being, it is equally not a genus of anything else; for that
would make Being a genus of all other things.
- In sum, the unity exhibited in Being on the one hand approximates to
Unity-Absolute and on the other tends to identify itself with Being: Being is a
unity in relation to the Absolute, is Being by virtue of its sequence upon that
Absolute: it is indeed potentially a plurality, and yet it remains a unity and
rejecting division refuses thereby to become a genus.
- 10. In what sense is the particular manifestation of Being a unity?
Clearly, in so far as it is one thing, it forfeits its unity; with "one" and
"thing" we have already plurality. No species can be a unity in more than an
equivocal sense: a species is a plurality, so that the "unity" here is that of
an army or a chorus. The unity of the higher order does not belong to species;
unity is, thus, ambiguous, not taking the same form in Being and in particular
beings.
- It follows that unity is not a genus. For a genus is such that
wherever it is affirmed its opposites cannot also be affirmed; anything of
which unity and its opposites are alike affirmed- and this implies the whole of
Being- cannot have unity as a genus. Consequently unity can be affirmed as a
genus neither of the primary genera- since the unity of Being is as much a
plurality as a unity, and none of the other [primary] genera is a unity to the
entire exclusion of plurality- nor of things posterior to Being, for these most
certainly are a plurality. In fact, no genus with all its items can be a unity;
so that unity to become a genus must forfeit its unity. The unit is prior to
number; yet number it must be, if it is to be a genus.
- Again, the unit is a unit from the point of view of number: if it is
a unit generically, it will not be a unit in the strict sense.
- Again, just as the unit, appearing in numbers, not regarded as a
genus predicated of them, but is thought of as inherent in them, so also unity,
though present in Being, cannot stand as genus to Being or to the other genera
or to anything whatever.
- Further, as the simplex must be the principle of the non-simplex,
though not its genus- for then the non-simplex too would be simplex,- so it
stands with unity; if unity is a Principle; it cannot be a genus to its
subsequents, and therefore cannot be a genus of Being or of other things. If it
is nevertheless to be a genus, everything of which it is a genus must be taken
as a unit- a notion which implies the separation of unity from substance: it
will not, therefore, be all-embracing. just as Being is not a genus of
everything but only of species each of which is a being, so too unity will be a
genus of species each of which is a unity. But that raises the question of what
difference there is between one thing and another in so far as they are both
units, corresponding to the difference between one being and another.
- Unity, it may be suggested, is divided in its conjunction with Being
and Substance; Being because it is so divided is considered a genus- the one
genus manifested in many particulars; why then should not unity be similarly a
genus, inasmuch as its manifestations are as many as those of Substance and it
is divided into as many particulars?
- In the first place, the mere fact that an entity inheres in many
things is not enough to make it a genus of those things or of anything else: in
a word, a common property need not be a genus. The point inherent in a line is
not a genus of lines, or a genus at all; nor again, as we have observed, is the
unity latent in numbers a genus either of the numbers or of anything else:
genus demands that the common property of diverse objects involve also
differences arising out of its own character, that it form species, and that it
belong to the essence of the objects. But what differences can there be in
unity? What species does it engender? If it produces the same species as we
find in connection with Being, it must be identical with Being: only the name
will differ, and the term Being may well suffice.
- 11. We are bound however to enquire under what mode unity is
contained in Being. How is what is termed the "dividing" effected- especially
the dividing of the genera Being and unity? Is it the same division, or is it
different in the two cases?
- First then: In what sense, precisely, is any given particular called
and known to be a unity? Secondly: Does unity as used of Being carry the same
connotation as in reference to the Absolute?
- Unity is not identical in all things; it has a different significance
according as it is applied to the Sensible and the Intellectual realms- Being
too, of course, comports such a difference- and there is a difference in the
unity affirmed among sensible things as compared with each other; the unity is
not the same in the cases of chorus, camp, ship, house; there is a difference
again as between such discrete things and the continuous. Nevertheless, all are
representations of the one exemplar, some quite remote, others more effective:
the truer likeness is in the Intellectual; Soul is a unity, and still more is
Intellect a unity and Being a unity.
- When we predicate Being of a particular, do we thereby predicate of
it unity, and does the degree of its unity tally with that of its being? Such
correspondence is accidental: unity is not proportionate to Being; less unity
need not mean less Being. An army or a choir has no less Being than a house,
though less unity.
- It would appear, then, that the unity of a particular is related not
so much to Being as to a standard of perfection: in so far as the particular
attains perfection, so far it is a unity; and the degree of unity depends on
this attainment. The particular aspires not simply to Being, but to
Being-in-perfection: it is in this strain towards their perfection that such
beings as do not possess unity strive their utmost to achieve it.
- Things of nature tend by their very nature to coalesce with each
other and also to unify each within itself; their movement is not away from but
towards each other and inwards upon themselves. Souls, moreover, seem to desire
always to pass into a unity over and above the unity of their own substance.
Unity in fact confronts them on two sides: their origin and their goal alike
are unity; from unity they have arisen, and towards unity they strive. Unity is
thus identical with Goodness [is the universal standard of perfection]; for no
being ever came into existence without possessing, from that very moment, an
irresistible tendency towards unity.
- From natural things we turn to the artificial. Every art in all its
operation aims at whatsoever unity its capacity and its models permit, though
Being most achieves unity since it is closer at the start.
- That is why in speaking of other entities we assert the name only,
for example man; when we say "one man," we have in mind more than one; and if
we affirm unity of him in any other connection, we regard it as supplementary
[to his essence]: but when we speak of Being as a whole we say it is one Being
without presuming that it is anything but a unity; we thereby show its close
association with Goodness.
- Thus for Being, as for the others, unity turns out to be, in some
sense, Principle and Term, not however in the same sense as for things of the
physical order- a discrepancy leading us to infer that even in unity there are
degrees of priority.
- How, then, do we characterize the unity [thus diverse] in Being? Are
we to think of it as a common property seen alike in all its parts? In the
first place, the point is common to lines and yet is not their genus, and this
unity we are considering may also be common to numbers and not be their genus-
though, we need hardly say, the unity of Unity-Absolute is not that of the
numbers, one, two and the rest. Secondly, in Being there is nothing to prevent
the existence of prior and posterior, simple and composite: but unity, even if
it be identical in all the manifestations of Being, having no differentiae can
produce no species; but producing no species it cannot be a genus.
- 12. Enough upon that side of the question. But how does the
perfection [goodness] of numbers, lifeless things, depend upon their particular
unity? Just as all other inanimates find their perfection in their unity.
- If it should be objected that numbers are simply non-existent, we
should point out that our discussion is concerned [not with units as such, but]
with beings considered from the aspect of their unity.
- We may again be asked how the point- supposing its independent
existence granted- participates in perfection. If the point is chosen as an
inanimate object, the question applies to all such objects: but perfection does
exist in such things, for example in a circle: the perfection of the circle
will be perfection for the point; it will aspire to this perfection and strive
to attain it, as far as it can, through the circle.
- But how are the five genera to be regarded? Do they form particulars
by being broken up into parts? No; the genus exists as a whole in each of the
things whose genus it is.
- But how, at that, can it remain a unity? The unity of a genus must be
considered as a whole-in-many.
- Does it exist then only in the things participating in it? No; it has
an independent existence of its own as well. But this will, no doubt, become
clearer as we proceed.
- 13. We turn to ask why Quantity is not included among the primary
genera, and Quality also.
- Quantity is not among the primaries, because these are permanently
associated with Being. Motion is bound up with Actual Being [Being-in-Act],
since it is its life; with Motion, Stability too gained its foothold in
Reality; with these are associated Difference and Identity, so that they also
are seen in conjunction with Being. But number [the basis of Quantity] is a
posterior. It is posterior not only with regard to these genera but also within
itself; in number the posterior is divided from the prior; this is a sequence
in which the posteriors are latent in the priors [and do not appear
simultaneously]. Number therefore cannot be included among the primary genera;
whether it constitutes a genus at all remains to be examined.
- Magnitude [extended quantity] is in a still higher degree posterior
and composite, for it contains within itself number, line and surface. Now if
continuous magnitude derives its quantity from number, and number is not a
genus, how can magnitude hold that status? Besides, magnitudes, like numbers,
admit of priority and posteriority.
- If, then, Quantity be constituted by a common element in both number
and magnitude, we must ascertain the nature of this common element, and
consider it, once discovered, as a posterior genus, not as one of the
Primaries: thus failing of primary status, it must be related, directly or
indirectly, to one of the Primaries.
- We may take it as clear that it is the nature of Quantity to indicate
a certain quantum, and to measure the quantum of the particular; Quantity is
moreover, in a sense, itself a quantum. But if the quantum is the common
element in number and magnitude, either we have number as a primary with
magnitude derived from it, or else number must consist of a blending of Motion
and Stability, while magnitude will be a form of Motion or will originate in
Motion, Motion going forth to infinity and Stability creating the unit by
checking that advance.
- But the problem of the origin of number and magnitude, or rather of
how they subsist and are conceived, must be held over. It may, thus, be found
that number is among the primary genera, while magnitude is posterior and
composite; or that number belongs to the genus Stability, while magnitude must
be consigned to Motion. But we propose to discuss all this at a later stage.
- 14. Why is Quality, again, not included among the Primaries? Because
like Quantity it is a posterior, subsequent to Substance. Primary Substance
must necessarily contain Quantity and Quality as its consequents; it cannot owe
its subsistence to them, or require them for its completion: that would make it
posterior to Quality and Quantity.
- Now in the case of composite substances- those constituted from
diverse elements- number and qualities provide a means of differentiation: the
qualities may be detached from the common core around which they are found to
group themselves. But in the primary genera there is no distinction to be drawn
between simples and composites; the difference is between simples and those
entities which complete not a particular substance but Substance as such. A
particular substance may very well receive completion from Quality, for though
it already has Substance before the accession of Quality, its particular
character is external to Substance. But in Substance itself all the elements
are substantial.
- Nevertheless, we ventured to assert elsewhere that while the
complements of Substance are only by analogy called qualities, yet accessions
of external origin and subsequent to Substance are really qualities; that,
further, the properties which inhere in substances are their activities [Acts],
while those which are subsequent are merely modifications [or Passions]: we now
affirm that the attributes of the particular substance are never complementary
to Substance [as such]; an accession of Substance does not come to the
substance of man qua man; he is, on the contrary, Substance in a higher degree
before he arrives at differentiation, just as he is already "living being"
before he passes into the rational species.
- 15. How then do the four genera complete Substance without qualifying
it or even particularizing it?
- It has been observed that Being is primary, and it is clear that none
of the four- Motion, Stability, Difference, Identity- is distinct from it. That
this Motion does not produce Quality is doubtless also clear, but a word or two
will make it clearer still.
- If Motion is the Act of Substance, and Being and the Primaries in
general are its Act, then Motion is not an accidental attribute: as the Act of
what is necessarily actual [what necessarily involves Act], it is no longer to
be considered as the complement of Substance but as Substance itself. For this
reason, then, it has not been assigned to a posterior class, or referred to
Quality, but has been made contemporary with Being.
- The truth is not that Being first is and then takes Motion, first is
and then acquires Stability: neither Stability nor Motion is a mere
modification of Being. Similarly, Identity and Difference are not later
additions: Being did not grow into plurality; its very unity was a plurality;
but plurality implies Difference, and unity-in-plurality involves Identity.
- Substance [Real Being] requires no more than these five constituents;
but when we have to turn to the lower sphere, we find other principles giving
rise no longer to Substance (as such) but to quantitative Substance and
qualitative: these other principles may be regarded as genera but not primary
genera.
- 16. As for Relation, manifestly an offshoot, how can it be included
among primaries? Relation is of thing ranged against thing; it is not
self-pivoted, but looks outward.
- Place and Date are still more remote from Being. Place denotes the
presence of one entity within another, so that it involves a duality; but a
genus must be a unity, not a composite. Besides, Place does not exist in the
higher sphere, and the present discussion is concerned with the realm of True
Being.
- Whether time is There, remains to be considered. Apparently it has
less claim than even Place. If it is a measurement, and that a measurement of
Motion, we have two entities; the whole is a composite and posterior to Motion;
therefore it is not on an equal footing with Motion in our classification.
- Action and Passivity presuppose Motion; if, then, they exist in the
higher sphere, they each involve a duality; neither is a simplex.
- Possession is a duality, while Situation, as signifying one thing
situated in another, is a threefold conception.
- 17. Why are not beauty, goodness and the virtues, together with
knowledge and intelligence, included among the primary genera?
- If by goodness we mean The First- what we call the Principle of
Goodness, the Principle of which we can predicate nothing, giving it this name
only because we have no other means of indicating it- then goodness, clearly,
can be the genus of nothing: this principle is not affirmed of other things; if
it were, each of these would be Goodness itself. The truth is that it is prior
to Substance, not contained in it. If, on the contrary, we mean goodness as a
quality, no quality can be ranked among the primaries.
- Does this imply that the nature of Being is not good? Not good, to
begin with, in the sense in which The First is good, but in another sense of
the word: moreover, Being does not possess its goodness as a quality but as a
constituent.
- But the other genera too, we said, are constituents of Being, and are
regarded as genera because each is a common property found in many things. If
then goodness is similarly observed in every part of Substance or Being, or in
most parts, why is goodness not a genus, and a primary genus? Because it is not
found identical in all the parts of Being, but appears in degrees, first,
second and subsequent, whether it be because one part is derived from another-
posterior from prior- or because all are posterior to the transcendent Unity,
different parts of Being participating in it in diverse degrees corresponding
to their characteristic natures.
- If however we must make goodness a genus as well [as a transcendent
source], it will be a posterior genus, for goodness is posterior to Substance
and posterior to what constitutes the generic notion of Being, however
unfailingly it be found associated with Being; but the Primaries, we decided,
belong to Being as such, and go to form Substance.
- This indeed is why we posit that which transcends Being, since Being
and Substance cannot but be a plurality, necessarily comprising the genera
enumerated and therefore forming a one-and-many.
- It is true that we do not hesitate to speak of the goodness inherent
in Being" when we are thinking of that Act by which Being tends, of its nature,
towards the One: thus, we affirm goodness of it in the sense that it is thereby
moulded into the likeness of The Good. But if this "goodness inherent in Being"
is an Act directed toward The Good, it is the life of Being: but this life is
Motion, and Motion is already one of the genera.
- 18. To pass to the consideration of beauty:
- If by beauty we mean the primary Beauty, the same or similar
arguments will apply here as to goodness: and if the beauty in the Ideal-Form
is, as it were, an effulgence [from that primary Beauty], we may observe that
it is not identical in all participants and that an effulgence is necessarily a
posterior.
- If we mean the beauty which identifies itself with Substance, this
has been covered in our treatment of Substance.
- If, again, we mean beauty in relation to ourselves as spectators in
whom it produces a certain experience, this Act [of production] is Motion- and
none the less Motion by being directed towards Absolute Beauty.
- Knowledge again, is Motion originating in the self; it is the
observation of Being- an Act, not a State: hence it too falls under Motion, or
perhaps more suitably under Stability, or even under both; if under both,
knowledge must be thought of as a complex, and if a complex, is posterior.
- Intelligence, since it connotes intelligent Being and comprises the
total of existence, cannot be one of the genera: the true Intelligence [or
Intellect] is Being taken with all its concomitants [with the other four
genera]; it is actually the sum of all the Existents: Being on the contrary,
stripped of its concomitants, may be counted as a genus and held to an element
in Intelligence.
- Justice and self-control [sophrosyne], and virtue in general- these
are all various Acts of Intelligence: they are consequently not primary genera;
they are posterior to a genus, that is to say, they are species.
- 19. Having established our four primary genera, it remains for us to
enquire whether each of them of itself alone produces species. And especially,
can Being be divided independently, that is without drawing upon the other
genera? Surely not: the differentiae must come from outside the genus
differentiated: they must be differentiae of Being proper, but cannot be
identical with it.
- Where then is it to find them? Obviously not in non-beings. If then
in beings, and the three genera are all that is left, clearly it must find them
in these, by conjunction and couplement with these, which will come into
existence simultaneously with itself.
- But if all come into existence simultaneously, what else is produced
but that amalgam of all Existents which we have just considered [Intellect]?
How can other things exist over and above this all-including amalgam? And if
all the constituents of this amalgam are genera, how do they produce species?
How does Motion produce species of Motion? Similarly with Stability and the
other genera.
- A word of warning must here be given against sinking the various
genera in their species; and also against reducing the genus to a mere
predicate, something merely seen in the species. The genus must exist at once
in itself and in its species; it blends, but it must also be pure; in
contributing along with other genera to form Substance, it must not destroy
itself. There are problems here that demand investigation.
- But since we identified the amalgam of the Existents [or primary
genera] with the particular intellect, Intellect as such being found identical
with Being or Substance, and therefore prior to all the Existents, which may be
regarded as its species or members, we may infer that the intellect, considered
as completely unfolded, is a subsequent.
- Our treatment of this problem may serve to promote our investigation;
we will take it as a kind of example, and with it embark upon our enquiry.
- 20. We may thus distinguish two phases of Intellect, in one of which
it may be taken as having no contact whatever with particulars and no Act upon
anything; thus it is kept apart from being a particular intellect. In the same
way science is prior to any of its constituent species, and the specific
science is prior to any of its component parts: being none of its particulars,
it is the potentiality of all; each particular, on the other hand, is actually
itself, but potentially the sum of all the particulars: and as with the
specific science, so with science as a whole. The specific sciences lie in
potentiality in science the total; even in their specific character they are
potentially the whole; they have the whole predicated of them and not merely a
part of the whole. At the same time, science must exist as a thing in itself,
unharmed by its divisions.
- So with Intellect. Intellect as a whole must be thought of as prior
to the intellects actualized as individuals; but when we come to the particular
intellects, we find that what subsists in the particulars must be maintained
from the totality. The Intellect subsisting in the totality is a provider for
the particular intellects, is the potentiality of them: it involves them as
members of its universality, while they in turn involve the universal Intellect
in their particularity, just as the particular science involves science the
total.
- The great Intellect, we maintain, exists in itself and the particular
intellects in themselves; yet the particulars are embraced in the whole, and
the whole in the particulars. The particular intellects exist by themselves and
in another, the universal by itself and in those. All the particulars exist
potentially in that self-existent universal, which actually is the totality,
potentially each isolated member: on the other hand, each particular is
actually what it is [its individual self], potentially the totality. In so far
as what is predicated of them is their essence, they are actually what is
predicated of them; but where the predicate is a genus, they are that only
potentially. On the other hand, the universal in so far as it is a genus is the
potentiality of all its subordinate species, though none of them in actuality;
all are latent in it, but because its essential nature exists in actuality
before the existence of the species, it does not submit to be itself
particularized. If then the particulars are to exist in actuality- to exist,
for example, as species- the cause must lie in the Act radiating from the
universal.
- 21. How then does the universal Intellect produce the particulars
while, in virtue of its Reason-Principle, remaining a unity? In other words,
how do the various grades of Being, as we call them, arise from the four
primaries? Here is this great, this infinite Intellect, not given to idle
utterance but to sheer intellection, all-embracing, integral, no part, no
individual: how, we ask, can it possibly be the source of all this plurality?
- Number at all events it possesses in the objects of its
contemplation: it is thus one and many, and the many are powers, wonderful
powers, not weak but, being pure, supremely great and, so to speak, full to
overflowing powers in very truth, knowing no limit, so that they are infinite,
infinity, Magnitude-Absolute.
- As we survey this Magnitude with the beauty of Being within it and
the glory and light around it, all contained in Intellect, we see,
simultaneously, Quality already in bloom, and along with the continuity of its
Act we catch a glimpse of Magnitude at Rest. Then, with one, two and three in
Intellect, Magnitude appears as of three dimensions, with Quantity entire.
Quantity thus given and Quality, both merging into one and, we may almost say,
becoming one, there is at once shape. Difference slips in to divide both
Quantity and Quality, and so we have variations in shape and differences of
Quality. Identity, coming in with Difference, creates equality, Difference
meanwhile introducing into Quantity inequality, whether in number or in
magnitude: thus are produced circles and squares, and irregular figures, with
number like and unlike, odd and even.
- The life of Intellect is intelligent, and its activity [Act] has no
failing-point: hence it excludes none of the constituents we have discovered
within it, each one of which we now see as an intellectual function, and all of
them possessed by virtue of its distinctive power and in the mode appropriate
to Intellect.
- But though Intellect possesses them all by way of thought, this is
not discursive thought: nothing it lacks that is capable of serving as
Reason-Principle, while it may itself be regarded as one great and perfect
Reason-Principle, holding all the Principles as one and proceeding from its own
Primaries, or rather having eternally proceeded, so that "proceeding" is never
true of it. It is a universal rule that whatever reasoning discovers to exist
in Nature is to be found in Intellect apart from all ratiocination: we conclude
that Being has so created Intellect that its reasoning is after a mode similar
to that of the Principles which produce living beings; for the
Reason-Principles, prior to reasoning though they are, act invariably in the
manner which the most careful reasoning would adopt in order to attain the best
results.
- What conditions, then, are we to think of as existing in that realm
which is prior to Nature and transcends the Principles of Nature? In a sphere
in which Substance is not distinct from Intellect, and neither Being nor
Intellect is of alien origin, it is obvious that Being is best served by the
domination of Intellect, so that Being is what Intellect wills and is: thus
alone can it be authentic and primary Being; for if Being is to be in any sense
derived, its derivation must be from Intellect.
- Being, thus, exhibits every shape and every quality; it is not seen
as a thing determined by some one particular quality; there could not be one
only, since the principle of Difference is there; and since Identity is equally
there, it must be simultaneously one and many. And so Being is; such it always
was: unity-with-plurality appears in all its species, as witness all the
variations of magnitude, shape and quality. Clearly nothing may legitimately be
excluded [from Being], for the whole must be complete in the higher sphere
which, otherwise, would not be the whole.
- Life, too, burst upon Being, or rather was inseparably bound up with
it; and thus it was that all living things of necessity came to be. Body too
was there, since Matter and Quality were present.
- Everything exists forever, unfailing, involved by very existence in
eternity. Individuals have their separate entities, but are at one in the
[total] unity. The complex, so to speak, of them all, thus combined, is
Intellect; and Intellect, holding all existence within itself, is a complete
living being, and the essential Idea of Living Being. In so far as Intellect
submits to contemplation by its derivative, becoming an Intelligible, it gives
that derivative the right also to be called "living being."
- 22. We may here adduce the pregnant words of Plato: "Inasmuch as
Intellect perceives the variety and plurality of the Forms present in the
complete Living Being...." The words apply equally to Soul; Soul is subsequent
to Intellect, yet by its very nature it involves Intellect in itself and
perceives more clearly in that prior. There is Intellect in our intellect also,
which again perceives more clearly in its prior, for while of itself it merely
perceives, in the prior it also perceives its own perception.
- This intellect, then, to which we ascribe perception, though not
divorced from the prior in which it originates, evolves plurality out of unity
and has bound up with it the principle of Difference: it therefore takes the
form of a plurality-in-unity. A plurality-in-unity, it produces the many
intellects by the dictate of its very nature.
- It is certainly no numerical unity, no individual thing; for whatever
you find in that sphere is a species, since it is divorced from Matter. This
may be the import of the difficult words of Plato, that Substance is broken up
into an infinity of parts. So long as the division proceeds from genus to
species, infinity is not reached; a limit is set by the species generated: the
lowest species, however- that which is not divided into further species- may be
more accurately regarded as infinite. And this is the meaning of the words: "to
relegate them once and for all to infinity and there abandon them." As for
particulars, they are, considered in themselves, infinite, but come under
number by being embraced by the [total] unity.
- Now Soul has Intellect for its prior, is therefore circumscribed by
number down to its ultimate extremity; at that point infinity is reached. The
particular intellect, though all-embracing, is a partial thing, and the
collective Intellect and its various manifestations [all the particular
intellects] are in actuality parts of that part. Soul too is a part of a part,
though in the sense of being an Act [actuality] derived from it. When the Act
of Intellect is directed upon itself, the result is the manifold [particular]
intellects; when it looks outwards, Soul is produced.
- If Soul acts as a genus or a species, the various [particular] souls
must act as species. Their activities [Acts] will be twofold: the activity
upward is Intellect; that which looks downward constitutes the other powers
imposed by the particular Reason-Principle [the Reason-Principle of the being
ensouled]; the lowest activity of Soul is in its contact with Matter to which
it brings Form.
- This lower part of Soul does not prevent the rest from being entirely
in the higher sphere: indeed what we call the lower part is but an image of
Soul: not that it is cut off from Soul; it is like the reflection in the
mirror, depending upon the original which stands outside of it.
- But we must keep in mind what this "outside" means. Up to the
production of the image, the Intellectual realm is wholly and exclusively
composed of Intellectual Beings: in the same way the Sensible world,
representing that in so far as it is able to retain the likeness of a living
being, is itself a living being: the relation is like that of a portrait or
reflection to the original which is regarded as prior to the water or the
painting reproducing it.
- The representation, notice, in the portrait or on the water is not of
the dual being, but of the one element [Matter] as formed by the other [Soul].
Similarly, this likeness of the Intellectual realm carries images, not of the
creative element, but of the entities contained in that creator, including Man
with every other living being: creator and created are alike living beings,
though of a different life, and both coexist in the Intellectual realm.
Essene Nazarean Church of Mount Carmel
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