Monday, July 13, 2026

Brief Notes on Various Topics - 101

13 July 2026

Brief Notes on Various Topics – 101

1.  The Political Perspective

I listened to a brief presentation by a professor of philosophy regarding Plato.  He argued in favor of the interpretation of Leo Strauss; I mean that the professor argues that Strauss is the most insightful recent scholar on Plato.  And the reason given for the importance of Strauss is that Strauss abandoned metaphysical and mystical interpretations of Plato’s Dialogues and brought out the political nature of Plato’s works.  I have read this kind of interpretation before (I am also aware that there are those that disagree that this is how Strauss treats Plato, but that’s another issue.  The view of Strauss presented by this philosophy professor is widespread.) 

As I mentioned, the video was brief, only a few minutes, and I hesitated to respond.  But he invited people to comment, so I asked him, given his views, how would he handle the episodes in the Dialogues where Socrates goes into some kind of trance, or meditative state.  I mentioned specifically the Symposium and Phaedrus.  I suggested that, given these episodes, it is difficult to maintain that Plato was in some sense anti-mystical, that Plato was kind of a proto-analytic philosopher who specialized in political philosophy.  The professor responded by saying that what Strauss had accomplished was a realignment (his word) of what is significant in the Dialogues; that is to say that Strauss foregrounds political thought which earlier Platonists (he specifically mentions Christian Platonism as an example) had neglected.

Needless to say, this is not my point of view.  It isn’t only the episodes depicting trance states that are significant.  A Dialogue like Phaedo which is focused on the nature of the soul, the teachings of rebirth, and the practices of asceticism, is entirely devoted to non-material realities and mystical experiences that are depicted in the penultimate section of mythic unfolding.

The separation of Western Philosophy from its spiritual roots is, to my mind, a kind of cultural tragedy; but that is what has happened.  And that is the what Universities are structured to present as philosophy.  From the perspective of this kind of separation, the history of philosophy is understood to be a kind of freeing itself from superstitions such as mysticism and spirituality. 

For the contemporary Platonist who wants to actually practice the Platonic Way or Path, I think one important step to take is to let the Dialogues speak in their own voice, without bringing to them contemporary assumptions such as materialism, reductionism, and so forth.  When this step is taken the Dialogues of Plato open up a vaster and richer understanding of the cosmos, an understanding that can be pursued and practiced for many lifetimes.

2.  Monism

The term ‘monism’ emerged, I think, in the 18th or 19th century.  It appeared as part of an effort, centered in Germany, to approach the history of philosophy through classification systems that in some ways mimicked scientific systems of classification, such as the periodic table of the elements and biological classifications, that have had great success in their respective fields.  ‘Monism’ came with ‘dualism’ and ‘pluralism.’  In general, I think that this specific classification of monism, dualism, pluralism has been successful and has its uses.  But it is good to keep in mind that, for example, Platonists did not refer to themselves as monists; the term has been applied to some Platonist philosophers, such as Plotinus, retroactively.

I think of myself as a monist, and think that monism is a good descriptor of the Platonist tradition, while recognizing at the same time that there is variation among specific Platonist authors; that’s not unusual.  My view is that in Platonism there is one thing, the Good and the One, that is completely real in Platonist term.  But unlike some other examples of monism, Platonism does not consider the material world unreal.  Instead, Platonism views material entities as derivative of the ultimate and unique source, the One.  Material things are real, but they are less real than the One or the Noetic realities such as abstract objects and Platonic Forms.

Sometimes I read in scholarly works that Plato did not really commit himself to a specific metaphysical position.  I think this is mistaken.  I suspect that what is going on with that kind of assertion is that the scholar, or University Platonist, is looking for some kind of clear statement as to affiliation in the way that some philosopher today might say they are an existentialist, or a materialist, or a monist, pluralist, or dualist, and so forth.  What I suggest is that Plato does not seem to normally choose that way of speaking to present his metaphysics.  My observation is that Plato usually uses allegories and myths to express metaphysical truths, especially when Plato is dealing with realities that are difficult to present in terms of affirmations and negations.  I think the primary example of this is the allegory of the cave which, in my reading, culminates in a monist vision of the metaphysical sun.  And the sun is a symbol of what Platonist monism means.  In other words, the allegory of the cave is Plato’s statement on his metaphysical commitments and I think that allegory expresses a metaphysics that is consistent with monism.

Ultimately all things emanate from the transcendental sun of the One and are dependent upon the One.  In addition, the One is ineffable and beyond affirmation and negation.  This means that ultimate reality is unknowable through intellect and reason, but is approachable through intellect and reason.  Terms we use to designate the One are analogies of that which is beyond our grasp, of that which is the source of all that exists.

3.  Plato on Change

The Athenian Stranger: “Change, we shall find, is much the most dangerous thing in everything except what is bad – in all the seasons, in the winds, in bodily habits, and in the characters of souls.  It isn’t the case that change is, so to speak, safe in some things and dangerous in others, except, as I just now said, in bad things.

“Thus, if one were to look at bodies, one would see how they become accustomed to all foods and all drinks and exercises, even if at first they are upset by them; one would see how, with the passage of time, they grow, out of these very materials, flesh that is akin to these things, and come to like, be accustomed to and familiar with, a whole regimen – thriving on it in the best way from the point of view of both pleasure and health; one would see that if someone is ever compelled to change back to one of the reputable diets, he is at first upset with sickness, but then once again with difficulty recovers, by regaining a habituation in the food.  Now one must hold that this very same thing applies to the thoughts of human beings and the natures of their souls.  If they’re brought up under laws which by some divine good fortune have remained unchanged for a great length of time, if they neither remember nor have heard that these things were ever otherwise than they are at present, then the entire soul reverences and fears changing any of the things that are already laid down.  Somehow or other the lawgiver must think up a device by which this situation will prevail in the city.  The following is what I at least have discovered: as we said before, everyone thinks that very great and serious harm can’t follow from changes in the games of the young, on the grounds that these are really just games.  As a result, they don’t prevent such changes but give in to and follow them, not taking into account the fact that these boys who practice innovations in their games must necessarily grow up to be men who are different from those the earlier children grew into; being different, they seek a different way of life, and in seeking it they desire different practices and laws; from this it follows that none of them fears the arrival of what was now said to be the greatest evil for cities.  There are, indeed, other changes – those affecting outward appearance – that would do less damage; but whatever brings about frequent change in the praise and blame accorded to dispositions is the greatest of all changes, I believe, and would require the most attentive watching.”

(Plato, Laws, Book VII, translated by Thomas L. Pangle, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1980, pages 186-187, 797d-798d)

3.1  Plato talks about change and stability in Laws as well as in other Dialogues.  The passage quoted is one of the longer and more thorough on the subject.

3.2  In Laws Plato wants the laws of the proposed new city-state to be written in a manner that aligns the citizens to higher realities.  Higher realities, such as Nous and the One, are stable and unchanging.  Therefore, in order to live in accordance with these higher realities at least the appearance of stability needs to be cultivated and in this dialogue that means laws that are so well written that they do not change over long stretches of time.

3.2.1  I believe ‘long stretches of time’ means thousands of years, even ten thousand years, in Plato’s mind because in Laws the Egyptians are admired because their regulations for painting have not changed for thousands and thousands of years.

3.3  It is somewhat a puzzle for me that Plato argues that the changing seasons and the shifting of the wind are negative changes rather than, say, neutral, or perhaps even positive.  Perhaps these are symbols of instability for Plato as opposed to the sun and its light which is a symbol of stability.  I’m not sure of that, and I’m not aware of another dialogue where Plato unpacks the meaning of the changing seasons and the wind.  Nevertheless it is a puzzle to me because the changing seasons proceed in an orderly manner; yes the seasonal changes are changes, but the manner of the changes is predictable and points to a deeper stability.  It’s just not clear to me why this would be a problem.

3.3.1  But there is an example where Plato has a constructive relationship to a natural phenomenon; I am thinking of the sound of the cicadas in Phaedrus.

3.3.2  Perhaps Plato is thinking along the lines that the changing seasons in some way ‘teach’ young people that change and innovation in a city’s laws might lead to misalignment for the souls of its citizens.  I get the overall impression that Plato is concerned here, and in other places in Laws with the effect of precedent; the idea that if change is permitted, or even admired, in one context then change will be introduced into a context where it is inappropriate. 

3.4  If the reader interprets Laws as teachings that are applicable to one’s own life as a practitioner of the way of philosophy, then a passage like this is directing the person dedicated to philosophy to be very cautious about introducing changes into a traditional spiritual practice.  In today’s culture, which exalts change and alteration simply for the sake of change and alteration, as if they are inherently a good thing, such changes are introduced, even demanded, of spiritual traditions that are many thousands of years old, and they are often introduced thoughtlessly; kind of in the way a cultural fad is introduced.  Plato resists that kind of approach. 

3.4.1  A Daoist teacher once told me that Daoists are people who show up at an open village meeting to discuss the village’s plan for a new bridge and then ask if such a bridge is necessary, pointing out that the city has been in its current location for a long time and is doing just fine.

3.4.2  In my long involvement with Buddhism in the West, I have observed such innovations being introduced frequently and often adopted.  Because I studied overseas in Korea and Japan, I was sometimes aware of how this innovation or change would diminish the tradition; I rarely brought this up because there was no context to do so.  But sometimes in conversations with individuals it could be discussed, with mixed results.

3.4.3  Looking at a passage like this as instruction for practitioners of the way of philosophy helps to cultivate patience and endurance.  The ascetic practices of Platonism bear fruit, but that does not always happen immediately.  Contemplation bears fruit, but that does not always happen right away.  Dialectic bears fruit, but it can take time to learn how dialectic works.

3.5  Plato writes that changes of the negative kind (and negative changes are changes that make it more difficult to align with the transcendent) require ‘attentive watching.’  I think this is a good instruction for life in general; I mean that if you introduce a change into your spiritual practice, it is good to attentively watch how it impacts your spiritual development, whether or not the change is a step forward or a step back. 

 

Monday, July 6, 2026

Brief Notes on Various Topics -- 100

6 July 2026

Brief Notes on Various Topics – 100

1.  Money

In Laws Plato makes numerous comments on the way money corrupts politics and human relations in general.  Plato’s remarks on this topic sound surprisingly modern.  The role that the super wealthy play in politics these days is something Plato warned about.  But it’s not something that people in general have learned.

2.  Aligning the Mind with the Good and the One

My view is that the soul doesn’t change, does not develop, nor does the soul deteriorate under the influence of materiality.  I understand the soul to be still, passive, spacious, silent, and eternal. 

Because of this reason when I read passages in Platonic literature that speak of purifying the soul, or changing the soul, or a part of the soul, in some way, I reconfigure that in my own mind as some kind of change, such as purification, happening in the mind rather than the soul.  I say this because I understand the mind to be the seat, or origin, of differentiation in the individual; and that the mind is the presence of the noetic, or Mind, in the individual.

Because the nature of mind is differentiation, its energies are naturally focused on the many needs of the body and how to best fulfill them.  But if the mind begins, and the beginning can be very subtle, to differentiate between the agitations of the body and the placid nature of the soul, then it is possible for the mind to turn to the soul which is the source of that stillness.  Then the mind can make differentiations for the purpose of aligning the mind with the One, because the soul is the presence of the One in the individual.  This is how I understand differentiation and how it functions within a Platonic context.

The separation of body and soul that is spoken of in Dialogues like Phaedo, is accomplished by the mind’s ability to differentiate between that which aligns with the body and that which aligns with the soul, that which aligns with the ephemeral and that which aligns with the eternal.  This is the cultivation of wisdom and its application in practices such as purification through ascetic commitments.

3.  Old Age

I’ve been reading Plato’s Laws.  The three characters in the dialogue are all old men and this has led me to think about how old age impacts how one views the world.  When you reach old age, you realize that there are things you have often thought of doing that you will never do, that you do not have time to read all the books on that list of books you want to read, that most of the people you know have passed away and they are not being replaced by others (your social circle shrinks), and that a sunset is more enticing than the latest movie.  (As an aside, I have a fond memory of my grandparents, my father’s mother and father, who on most evenings would watch the sun set behind a stand of trees that was on the border of a state nature reserve that bordered their own property.  There was something very attractive about this custom of theirs that appealed to me even as a child.)

Plato does not specifically talk about old age in Laws (but Plato does talk about old age in the Republic).  But the circumstances of the dialogue are shaped by the fact that the three participants in the dialogue are elderly.  For example, the three participants walk at a slow pace because of their age (and because of the summer heat), and they stop frequently at shady spots by the road, or path, to refresh themselves before walking again.  I think this pace is embodied in the dialogue itself; in the way a topic is lingered over in remarkable detail before moving on to another topic.  It’s like the conversation has paused in some philosophical shade and when they finish the topic, then they start on the path of inquiry again. 

I also think that there is a connection between Laws and Phaedrus in that both dialogues take place in the open, outside of the city, and both dialogues take place in the heat of summer.  An openair setting is rare in Plato’s Dialogues.  And it is not often that Plato spends time on descriptions of the setting beyond a few masterful strokes.  But in Laws and Phaedrus Plato seems to spend time on the natural setting.  And the setting and season in some sense seems to shape both dialogues.  It’s not clear to me if there are specific topics that both dialogues explore; I can’t recall right now if that is the case.  But I think it’s a possibility that is worth exploring, especially if the reader also explores the undermeaning of the dialogues.

4.  Levels of Reading

The levels of reading we can engage in when reading Plato’s Dialogues resemble the levels of reality in Platonic Cosmology.  At one level the focus is on the material world of the Dialogue we are reading; things like the individuals involved in the verbal exchange, the location of the dialogue, the setting, the season, the activity that surrounds the dialogue (like a festival), and so forth.  At another level the focus is on the ideas being discussed; this is the noetic realm, the realm of Platonic Forms.  This is also where analytical tools such as reason and metaphor apply.  And finally, at another level still, the focus is on the transcendental, on the Good and the One, on that which is Eternal, eternity as such.  Sometimes one or the other levels takes center stage in a dialogue; but importantly, I think all three are present, either explicitly, or in the background, in each of the Dialogues.

5.  The ‘Brief Notes’ Series

This is the 100th post in the Brief Notes series.  It took me awhile to find this way of writing about Platonism, but once I did, I found it very congenial.  Overall the Brief Notes series feels a bit like a collage where the individual pieces of the collage, as well s the overall presentation, both are attractive.  There are precedents for this way of writing philosophy.  I think the earliest example in the West is Heraclitus whose pungent and powerful sayings have impacted people for thousands of years.  Nietzsche is a modern example of someone who could write attractive aphorisms.  Outside of the West, a work like the Dao De Ching is a series of very brief notes on various topics that people have studied and commented on for thousands of years.  In India, the Yoga Sutras are also an example of short form sayings used to communicated an enduring metaphysical view.

There exists a collection of ‘Epigrams’ attributed to Plato; there are eighteen of them in the Hackett Complete Works.  Attribution is disputed.  But it does show a short form, the epigram, was at one point in Platonist history considered worthy of inclusion in collections of Plato’s writings.  In any case, Brief Notes seems to work well for me and I look forward to the next 100 Brief Notes in the years to come.

 

 


Monday, June 29, 2026

On Prayer

29 June 2026

On Prayer

“The Athenian Stranger: . .  this is what I assert: it is dangerous for one who lacks intelligence to pray, and the opposite of what he wishes comes to pass.  If you want to take me seriously here, you may.”

(Plato, Laws, translated by Thomas Pangle, The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1980, page 72, 688b-688c, ISBN: 0226671100)

What the Athenian Stranger is referring to is petitionary prayer; that is to say making requests of the Gods for specific things.  This will become clearer with the additional quotes that follow.

“Socrates: . . .  you [Alcibiades] change about from this side to that without settling down for a moment, but as soon as you are firmly convinced of a thing you seem to slip out of it again and cease to hold the same view – well, if the god to whom you are going should even now appear to you and ask, before you uttered any prayer, whether you would be content to obtain one of those things which were mentioned at the beginning, or whether he should leave you to pray as you were, how do you suppose you would make the best of your chance – by accepting his offer, or by praying for something on your own account?

“Alcibiades:  Well, by the gods, I could not answer your question, Socrates, off hand.  Why, I take it to be a fatuous request, when it is really a case for great caution lest one pray unawares for what is evil while thinking it to be one’s good, and then after a little while, as you were saying, one change one’s tune and retract all one’s former prayers.”

(Plato, Alcibiades II, translated by W. R. M. Lamb, Loeb Classical Library, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1927, page 263, 147e-148b, ISBN: 9780674992214)

What Socrates is saying is that given the fickle character of Alcibiades it is likely that Alcibiades could easily change his mind about what he wanted from the gods to whom he was praying.  Alcibiades does not know how to respond to the point Socrates is making, but acknowledges that it is possible to pray for something that will prove harmful, both to oneself and to others; discovering that one has in fact made such a prayer will lead to wanting to pray to retract one’s former prayers.  Better to refrain from prayer until such time as one’s mind has stabilized.

The strongest critique of prayer from a Platonic perspective that I have run across is Oration 5 by Maximus of Tyre, simply titled ‘Prayer.’  Maximus begins by telling legends of how individuals were trapped by their prayer requests when the God that was prayed to granted the request in an unexpected way.  Some of these legends are famous such as the one about the Emperor who wanted to conquer a kingdom and asked an oracle about undertaking this conquest.  The Oracle responded by saying a great kingdom will be defeated if this project is undertaken.  The Emperor attacks and is defeated by the kingdom he attacks; the great kingdom that was defeated was his own.

It’s interesting to me that Maximus uses this as an example of why one should refrain from prayer because it shows that Maximus includes requests to Oracles as a type of prayer.  I find that interesting on a number of levels, not the least of which is that it differs from later Classical Platonists who tended to be more receptive to oracles.

Maximus also likes to emphasize that the gods are fickle and arbitrary in their granting of prayer requests, “When Priam offered prayers for his homeland, with daily sacrifices to Zeus of oxen and sheep, Zeus left them unfulfilled.”  And that’s just one example cited by Maximus.

(Maximus of Tyre, Oration 5: Prayer, translated by M. B. Trapp, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1997, page 43, ISBN: 0198149891)

Maximus undertakes an analysis of why things happen the way they do as an extended critique of why petitionary prayer is ineffective and unwise, “Of all the things which men pray to obtain, some are under the control of Providence, some are enforced by Destiny, some are at the mercy of fickle Fortune, and some are regulated by Science.  Providence is God’s work, Destiny the work of Necessity, Science the work of man, and Fortune the work of blind chance.  It is to the supervision of one or another of these four factors that the raw material of life is allocated.  What we pray for must therefore be attributed either to divine Providence, or to destined Necessity, or to human Science, or the vagaries of Fortune.

“If our objects are to be attributed to Providence, what place is there for prayer?”  Maximus makes a similar point with the other three factors of Destiny, Fortune, and Science.

(Ibid, pages 45-48)

Toward the conclusion Maximus does grant that philosophers such as Socrates and Pythagoras engaged in prayer.  But Maximus distinguishes between petitionary prayers and philosophical prayer, suggesting that philosophical prayer is a ‘conversation’ between the philosopher and the gods, “If you deprive life of philosophy, you have removed from it the living, breathing spark that alone knows how to pray.”

(Ibid, page 50)

It would appear that Maximus has the view that only a philosopher is mature enough to engage in prayer without exposing himself to strongly negative consequences.

These passages I have quoted are highly skeptical regarding the efficacy of prayer.  One might even draw the conclusion from these quotes that it is best to not engage in prayer, especially petitionary prayer.  The following quote from Phaedrus modifies that conclusion:

“Socrates:  I think he [Isocrates] has a nature above the speeches of Lysias and possesses a nobler character; so that I should not be surprised if, as he grows older, he should so excel in his present studies that all who have ever treated of rhetoric shall seem less than children; and I suspect that these studies will not satisfy him, but a more divine impulse will lead him to greater things; for my friend, something of philosophy is inborn in his mind.  This is the message that I carry from these deities to my favourite Isocrates, and do you carry the other to Lysias, your favourite.

“Phaedrus:  It shall be done; but now let us go, since the heat has grown gentler.

“Socrates:  Is it not well to pray to the deities here before we do?

“Phaedrus:  Of course.

“Socrates:  O beloved Pan and all ye other gods of this place, grant to me that I be made beautiful in my soul within, and that all external possessions be in harmony with my inner man.  May I consider the wise man rich; and may I have such wealth as only the self-restrained man can bear or endure – Do we need anything more, Phaedrus?  For me that prayer is enough.

“Phaedrus:  Let me also share in this prayer; for friends have all things in common.

“Socrates:  Let us go.”

(Plato, Phaedrus, translated by Harold North Fowler, Loeb Classical Library, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1914, page 579, 279a-279c, ISBN: 0674990404)

Here we have a famous example of Socrates praying to Pan and the ‘gods of this place.’  We have an intriguing contrast between Socrates sharing a prayer with Phaedrus in the dialogue Phaedrus, and Socrates challenging Alcibiades about what will happen to him if he prays in Alcibiades II.  I think the resolution of this is that Phaedrus, in the dialogue that carries his name, is engaged in deep philosophical discussion with Socrates; one gets the impression that Phaedrus is a budding philosopher with a very developed and cultivated mind.  In addition, the grove, which is outside the city walls of Athens, is thick with deities of various sorts; even the cicadas are communing with the gods in the hot summer air.  I suggest that these conditions are ideal for entering into prayer (as an aside, the grove is in nature, it is not a temple, which suggests that efficacious prayer has a spontaneous aspect to it.)

In contrast, Alcibiades has not developed his mind or his character and under the questioning of Socrates it is clear to the reader that Alcibiades has not lived an ‘examined life.’  (This is true for both Alcibiades I and II.)  Nor does the location of the dialogue lend support to prayer done in a manner consistent with the philosophical vocation.

The conclusion, I think, is that Socrates regards prayer as something that only a philosophical mind can undertake without inviting considerable risk both material and spiritual.

Concluding Remarks

This Platonist perspective on prayer would distinguish the life of a philosopher from that of a participant in the civic religion of Athens.  Praying for things, petitionary prayer, was a very common practice both at home altars and at temples.  For a philosopher to suggest that petitionary prayer is not a good idea for an untrained mind would, I think, have been baffling, or even seen as foolish, by most people.

I studied Buddhism in Korea many decades ago.  And there I learned that for most lay Buddhists their relationship to the Dharma is to go to a Temple, make an offering, light incense and bow, and then pray to the Buddha, or a Bodhisattva, for specific things: a new car, to pass a test, easy childbirth, a good business contract, a new house, and so forth.  In my own imagination I think of the civic religion of Athens as similarly focused. 

I think we often get a distorted impression of what religion is like in most circumstances, particularly regarding religions we don’t know much about.  Western Buddhists are inclined to read very sophisticated Buddhist analyses and philosophy; but these kinds of texts have almost no impact on an average Buddhist practitioner who goes to the Temple to pray.  Similarly, with regard to Platonism, those of us interested in Platonism may have developed sophisticated analyses as to the nature of the gods; a good example is the henads found in Proclus and other Late Classical Platonists’ writings.  Popular religion is, for the most part, practical; that is to say popular religion is looked at as a way to align with unseen forces so that one can better achieve material goals.  I understand that appeal and I am in some ways sympathetic to it.

But just as a philosopher cultivates a certain diet as a matter of purification, so also a philosopher cultivates a way of relating to gods, or unseen forces, that is also a matter of purification.  In this case the purification is meant to align one’s understanding with a larger context.

Personally, I pray every day as part of my morning practice.  I pray for those whom I have loved and who have passed away that they may rest in peace with the Good and the One.  I pray to embody the precepts of philosophy (ethical restraints).  And I repent for the negative things I have done in my past, that I may not repeat them.  I think this is consistent with the prayer that Socrates offers at the conclusion of Phaedrus.  My hope is that my practice of prayer may make me beautiful within, or uncover the beauty within, that I may return to the Good and the One and the Eternal.


Monday, June 22, 2026

Brief Notes on Various Topics -- 99

22 June 2026

Brief Notes on Various Topics - 99

1.  Contemplative vs. Theurgic Platonism

I’ve noticed for a number of years that Theurgic Platonism, what might be called Ceremonial Platonism, seems to have a more forward facing, or public facing, contemporary presence than Contemplative Platonism.  I say this because there seems to be more books on Theurgic perspectives than on the Contemplative perspectives.  It’s not that there are no books published on Contemplative Platonism: there is Eric Fallick’s Platonist Contemplative Asceticism: Practice and Principle and there is Mark Anderson’s Pure and I suspect there are others I’m forgetting or are not aware of.

In contrast there seems to be numerous books devoted to Theurgic Platonism from Academic sources as well as from non-academics interested in the subject.  Some authors, like Gregory Shaw and Edward P. Butler regularly publish from the Theurgic perspective.  And there are also highly scholarly books regularly published from the Theurgic perspective, sometimes sponsored by academic organizations or associations (as an aside, I have not observed an academic association or organization publishing on Contemplative Platonism, but I might have missed it.) 

In short, it seems to me that there is a greater emphasis on Theurgic Platonism than there is on Contemplative Platonism.  I think there are several reasons for this:

1.1--The first is that for some reason Theurgic Platonists have been successful at characterizing what I call Contemplative Platonism as a type of philosophical rationalism.  I have mentioned this before in posts dealing with other topics, but here I want to highlight the way this type of classification casts Contemplative Platonism into a shadow region which is difficult for people to access.  This is because Theurgic Platonists tend to present a dichotomy between the Ceremonial and the Rational.  This turns Contemplative Platonism into something people think they are familiar with because it fits in with classifications widely used in modernity.  I find it frequently stated, for example, that Plotinus is a ‘rationalist’ which, to my mind, completely misrepresents what Plotinus was doing.

1.2—Another reason for the sidelining of Contemplative Platonism is that the contemplative dimensions, or the contemplative presence, in traditional Platonist sources (such as the Dialogues, The Orations of Maximus of Tyre, The Enneads of Plotinus, and so forth) have been, for the most part absorbed into Christianity through the heritage of writers like Dionysius the Areopagite, and, to a lesser extent, Boethius, and others.  I think it is still difficult for Platonists to absorb the teachings on contemplation found in many Platonist sources without viewing them through a Christian lens and kind of accepting that contemplation is what Christian Platonists might do.

1.2.1  An example of the point I am making is that there are many volumes published about Christian, Catholic and Orthodox, Mysticism.  Some authors have devoted much of their lives to publishing series on this topic; a good example is the series of books published by Bernard McGinn on Christian Mysticism that covers this topic from very early examples to fairly recent manifestations.  In contrast, locating works on Platonic Mysticism, which do exist, requires dedication and persistence since such works tend to be marginal to how the Platonist tradition is understood.   

1.3  One of the intriguing things about Theurgic Platonism is that it seems to have recently found a place in the University.  I mean that some prominent contemporary Platonists who have a positive view of Theurgy are academics themselves and some are involved in various Platonist academic organizations.

1.4  I’m not complaining about this situation.  It is what it is.  But I think it is helpful for those of us who comprehend Platonism as a contemplative ascetic spiritual tradition to know where we stand in relation to other views of what Platonism is.

2.  Farewell, Angelina

The machine guns are roaring and the puppets heave rocks

And fiends nail timebombs to the hands of the clocks
Call me any name you like I will never deny it
Farewell, Angelina, the sky is erupting
I must go where it’s quiet.

Bob Dylan, Farewell Angelina

My favorite Bob Dylan song is Farewell Angelina.  It has a very simple melody and chord progression in 3-4 time.  In contrast, the images of Farewell Angelina can, at first, feel obscure and at times difficult to access.  After some time with the song, though, the listener can sense how the images gradually build up.  The images start with fairly benign examples like triangles ringing and an empty table by the sea; things like that.  As the verses progress the images become more stark including undertakers, shotgun blasts, and so forth.  I quoted the closing verse above which opens with images of violence in the first two lines.  In line 3 there is a shift and I see in this shift a kind of turning away and an arising of indifference as the verse says ‘Call me any name you like . . . ‘  This is a shift in mood in the song and introduces what I think of as the resolution of the last three lines.  The phrase ‘Farewell, Angelina’ is used at least once in each verse; in the opening verse it is used twice.  So the turning away found in line 3 emerges from this turning away from some kind of relationship.  (As an aside, the ending of relationships is a common theme in early Dylan; think of ‘It Ain’t Me Babe’ and ‘Don’t Think Twice’.  To be fair, such songs are found frequently in popular music, particularly in Country Western so Dylan writing songs where this theme appears fits in with the popular music of his time.)  In line 4 the violence that has appeared in various verses, culminating in lines 1 & 2 of the closing verse, returns with the phrase ‘the sky is erupting’. 

The concluding line, ‘I must go where it’s quiet’ is an explanation of what the singer is doing in the face of all the previous moments that are captured by the various images in the verses of the song.  The ‘quiet’ that the singer must go to is, to my way of thinking, an interior quiet.  This implies, I think, that one can only overcome the violence and cacophony of the previous images by finding the quiet, the peace, that is within.  This may be a stretch, but I think of this line as pointing to the antidote that is contemplation.  The sky is erupting, machine guns are firing, timebombs are ready to explode; even so there is a place of quiet and peace that we can always turn to because it is always present within.  From a Platonist perspective the ultimate source of the peace within is the presence of eternity which is the Good, the One, and the Beautiful.

You can listen to Farewell Angelina on YouTube.  It’s interesting to me that Bob Dylan himself did very few recordings of this song.  But there are excellent covers of this song by various artists, and there is a French version that I find really excellent as well called ‘Adieu Angelina’ which is also available on YouTube, sung by Nana Mouskouri who seemed to make the song a staple of her career, often singing it as a duet with others.  Probably the most famous cover of the song in the English-speaking world is the one by Joan Baez.  I think it’s helpful to listen to more than one version of the song as different singers highlight different aspects.

3.  Addendum to Last Week’s Post on Plato’s Laws

Last week I quoted an early section of Plato’s Laws, making the point that this section can be interpreted as Plato speaking to the reader about the multiple layers of meaning in that dialogue.  I think there is a similar passage in The Republic as follows:

“So Glaucon and the others begged me to help in every way; not abandon the discussion, but on the contrary track down the nature of each of our subjects (justice and injustice) and how the truth of each stood regarding the benefit they each provided.  So I said how it seemed to me, that: ‘The search we are undertaking is no mean task, but as I see it, it’s one that needs a sharp eye, not a weak one.  Since therefore,’ I said, ‘we are not good at making an inquiry of such a kind, I think we should employ the kind of investigation suitable for people who are not very keen-sighted, if someone had ordered them to read small letters from a distance, but then someone noticed that the same letters existed somewhere else written larger and on a larger background.  I think it would seem a godsend to read these first and then examine the smaller ones to see if they were the same.’

‘I’m all for that,’ said Adeimantus, ‘but what relevance here do you perceive in our search for ‘the just’?’

‘I’ll tell you,’ I said, ‘Do we talk sometimes of a justice of an individual person, and sometimes perhaps of a whole city-state too?’

‘Certainly,’ he said.

‘And of course a state is something larger than one person?’

‘Yes it is,’ he said.

‘In which case justice may be of a greater scale in the larger context and be easier to understand.  If you wish then, let’s firstly try to find out what kind of a ting it is in states, then let’s examine it in this way in each individual too by looking closely at the resemblance of the greater in the form of the lesser.’”

(Plato, The Republic, translated by Chris Emlyn-Jones and William Preddy, Loeb Classical Library, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2013, pages 159-161, 368c-369a, ISBN: 9780674996502)

3.1  I understand this quote, and the quote from the Laws that I posted last week, as Plato explaining to readers how to read his Dialogue, that the Republic has a layered structure with both individual and societal implications and meanings.  This is also what the passage from the Laws is telling us to do.

3.2  It would be helpful to look at the Dialogues and see where Plato offers this kind of instruction on how to read the Dialogues.  I think it shows Plato as being concerned that readers may not understand the layered approach Plato takes and for that reason Plato makes it clear in passages like the one from the Laws and from the Republic.  This shows Plato being transparent about his writing technique and his purposes.

3.3  One of the consequences that these quotes leads us to is that Plato is writing in such a way so as to point to a sense of unity in disparate aspects of our lives that we tend to overlook.  In a sense, Plato is pointing to unity so that we can get a ‘taste’ of unity as a prelude to our ascending to the Unity of the One.

3.4  In both quoted passages Plato points to different levels of the human experience, individual experience and larger social contexts, and then links them by pointing to a fundamental unity that we have failed to perceive or understand.  This approach is helpful to keep in mind when we read the Dialogues and other Platonic works, and also as a technique that can be applied to our own lives and interactions.

4.  The Solstice Sun

I and a few friends went out into the desert, not very far, to watch the June Solstice Sun rise over the eastern mountain range yesterday morning (21 June 2026).  This is something I have been doing for a few years and I find it an enriching meditation. 

On this June Solstice Morning the conditions could not have been more perfect.  There were no clouds and there was a modest breeze that kept the summer insects away.  The desert fauna spread out before us.  In the distance was a row of Palm Trees that line a road going to a desert trailer park.  Further in the distance is the eastern mountain range.  Behind us is the western mountain range which is much higher and steeper than the range to the east.  Because the western range is so high, it catches the morning light before the sun rises over the eastern mountains; that’s the first sign that sunrise is near.  The light on the western range slowly descends, sliding down the mountains, until the whole western range is in morning light before the sun ascends over the top of the eastern range for those of us standing on the valley floor.

When the sun appeared over the eastern mountains it felt like a symphony of recognition.  We bowed and offered silent thanks.

I was inspired to engage in this kind of practice by Plotinus, particularly the passage found at Ennead V.5.8.  You might want to spend some time with this passage; I always find it inspiring. 


Brief Notes on Various Topics - 101

13 July 2026 Brief Notes on Various Topics – 101 1.   The Political Perspective I listened to a brief presentation by a professor of p...