16 March 2022
Brief Notes on Various Topics – 88
1. Trappists
It was recently announced that the monks of the founding house of the Trappists, which is in France, is considering moving from its historic location. Some posts on the internet are saying that the monks are ‘closing’ the Abbey, but that’s not correct. I would put it that they are considering ‘downsizing’. I think the tentative plan is to find a new location by 2028. The main reason appears to be that the Abbey has only 20 monks now with very few new vocations and it is just not enough to maintain the very large Abbey they have inherited (this may also indicate a lack of donations, though the posts I have read don’t mention that).
The Abbey was founded in 1122 and has a continuous monastic presence since that time. The monastic reform that transformed the Abbey into the Mother House for the Trappists goes back to the 17th century.
I see this as another indication of the diminishing presence of what I refer to as the Ascetic Ideal. I see this as another indication as to why it is difficult to approach Platonism as a spiritual tradition grounded in the Ascetic Ideal; because the Ascetic Ideal is simply not understood in our culture at this time. The Ascetic Ideal is countercultural.
2. The Critique of Gnosticism by Plotinus
A friend of mine, in response to my post last week that refers to Plotinus’s ‘Against the Gnostics’, pointed out that the critique of Gnosticism would apply equally to Theurgy. What my friend was getting at is that one of the main criticisms of Gnosticism from Plotinus is that the Gnostics multiplied hypostases, level of reality, and other cosmological categories, for no apparent reason; they also multiplied types of living entities. This unnecessary complexity is something that Plotinus rejects. I think the main reason for this rejection is that such multiplication of entities is not based on contemplation; rather it is based on mental conjuration.
The same could be said for Theurgy when it multiplies types of deities and multiplies ritual contexts based on dubious claims. And the insertion of Henads into the Platonic metaphysical system is exactly the kind of thing that Plotinus was criticizing in ‘Against the Gnostics.’
3. Lake Wisdom
Reading Plato and Plotinus is like paddling a canoe on a summer lake; not at first. At first reading Plato and Plotinus is difficult though difficulty varies with specific writings. For example, a dialogue like “The Symposium” or an Ennead like “On Beauty” are accessible and are good starting points for reading in the Platonic tradition.
But at first there is a need to become familiar with the tradition’s vocabulary and its overall stance on philosophical issues. This is a challenge because Platonism differs from modern philosophy and so there is a natural friction that arises when someone familiar with modern philosophy begins to study Plato and Plotinus.
But after some time, which can be a few months to a few years, the reading kind of glides, the reading becomes a pleasure. One begins to look forward to it and such reading often becomes a daily practice that nourishes one’s whole day.
4. A Comment on Whitehead
As regular readers know, I am fond of Alfred North Whitehead and his Process and Reality. But I was thinking about ethical restraint in Platonism and it occurred to me that there are no teachings on ethical restraint, or asceses, in Whitehead. This might indicate that Whitehead approaches Platonism primarily in the way that mathematicians approach Platonism. I mean that mathematicians seem to be impressed by the explanatory range and power of Platonism as applied to the field of mathematics. I get it; it is impressive.
But from my perspective that relationship to Platonism hovers around the edges of Platonism rather than getting to the heart of Platonism, which is to adopt a renunciate life in order to turn away from the confusions and seductions of the material world. This is accomplished by adopting the ethical restraints.
I see the practice of ethical restraints as presented in Platonism as foundational because ethical restraints shifts one’s attention from pursuing pleasure to pursuing wisdom, because living a life of ethical restraint opens the door to living in the world based on the Ascetic Ideal, because ethical restraint aligns one with the Good and the One, because ethical restraint is the means for recognizing the presence of eternity.
5. Plotinus on the Affections of the Soul
“In general, our theory and intent is not to submit the soul to changes and alterations like the warming and cooling of bodies.”
(Plotinus, The Enneads, Ennead 3.6: “On the Impassibility of Things without Bodies”, Edited by Lloyd Gerson, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 2025, page 309, ISBN: 9781009604970)
“For how can the part of soul above that which experiences affections and the part above sense-perception and in general any part of soul, be unchangeable when vice, false beliefs, and mindlessness occur in connection with the soul? In addition, acts of appropriation and alienation occur in the soul when it feels pleasure and pain, when it is angry, jealous, acquisitive, desirous, and in general when it is not at all still but moves and changes in response to each thing that impinges on it.”
(As above, page 309)
“But perhaps in most cases what is termed the vice of this part of the soul is a bad state of the body and virtue the opposite, so that in neither case is there any addition to the soul.”
(As above, page 312)
5.1 I have come to view the soul as partless even though Platonists have routinely talked about various parts of the soul and how these parts have affections, afflictions, and tendencies. It was helpful to find that Plotinus raises some of the questions about the idea that the soul has parts and affections; no doubt I was partly moved to take on the view that the soul is partless due to these questions that Plotinus raised. I’m not saying that Plotinus had the view of a partless soul; I am suggesting that some of the questions Plotinus raises about the soul can, when considered and followed out in a direction that Plotinus himself did not take, lead to the view that the soul has no parts.
5.2 I take the view that the unchangeable nature of the soul that Plotinus refers to is due to the soul being the presence of the One in each individual. The One is unity as such and the presence of the One in material individuals is what makes, or causes, the individual to be a particular thing. Without the presence of the One in each individual there would be no individuals, no things because there would be no underlying unity.
5.2.1 Plotinus, and other Platonists, view the soul as emerging in the third hypostasis; but I see the soul as always connected to the first hypostasis. In a way you could say that the soul is the first hypostasis.
It is time that emerges in the third hypostasis, time and cyclic existence. The presence of time in the individual connects the individual with the third hypostasis.
And it is differentiation that gives rise to all the affections and tendencies of the individual. Differentiation comes from mind; mind and differentiation have their origin in the second hypostasis. The presence of differentiation and mind in the individual is the presence of the Noetic.
From this perspective, each individual is a microcosmos of the Platonic metaphysical cosmology:
The One Soul/Unity
All of the affections are manifestations of differentiation and therefore found in mind. Mind and body need to be purified, but soul does not because the soul is never impure, because the One is never impure. This view is briefly mentioned in the third quote where Plotinus suggests (using ‘perhaps’) that vice in a part of the soul is actually a bad state of the body. I would add, ‘or the mind.’ Again, I am not suggesting that Plotinus adopted this view, but Plotinus drops some hints regarding this view and its implications. If these hints are seeds, it seems I have been watering those seeds and I’m beginning to see them sprout.
6. Becoming a Platonist
It’s a bit of a paradox, becoming a Platonist. I mean that Platonism is primarily focused on the Good and the One, the transcendental which is beyond time, beyond change, beyond becoming and begoning. But as human beings who have taken birth in material existence we are embedded in becoming and begoning. The trick here is to use becoming and begoning as means for transcendental understanding.