9 February 2026
Brief Notes on Various Topics – 84
1. The Ascetic Ideal
I often refer to Platonism as a spiritual tradition that has a foundation in asceticism and purification through the practice of various types of ethical restraint and renunciation. For short I refer to this as The Ascetic Ideal; I mean that the practice of Platonism is built upon The Ascetic Ideal.
This Ascetic Ideal is woven into the fabric of Plato’s Dialogues, the Enneads of Plotinus, the writings of Porphyry, as well as appearing in other Platonic writings. A singular feature of The Ascetic Ideal is that we should not base our lives on sensory stimulation, that sensory stimulation is a poor guide for living a good life. Further, according to The Ascetic Ideal sensory stimulation should be, as far as possible, minimized.
I was thinking about The Ascetic Ideal recently (I often think about it) because of the presence in the news of a very widespread corruption scandal that seems to be disclosing a network of misdeed among a very large number of elites. Those who are part of this network, or who are alleged to be part of this network, seem to have lived lives of maximal sensory indulgence; the opposite of a life based on The Ascetic Ideal.
It came to mind while thinking about this, that Plato in both The Republic and Laws goes to great lengths to require rulers to live lives of renunciation. In Laws rulers are required to not even have gold or silver present in their living quarters; and there are many more restrictions, or ethical restraints.
I think this shows how intensely aware Plato was regarding the temptations of sensory stimulation and how succumbing to those temptations leads not only to personal failings, but also to the corruption of society as a whole. This is a view, the view of The Ascetic Ideal, that has almost vanished from discussions in the public sphere; for example, could you imagine elected officials being required to divest themselves of excess income (however the society would define excess)? Or requiring those holding political office to be vegetarians? And so forth, you get the idea.
We have lost contact with The Ascetic Ideal.
2. Ennead 6.9.6
“How shall we speak of unity, and how is it to be made to be in accord with thinking?
“In fact, unity must be posited in more ways than a unit or a point is one. For in these cases the soul takes away extension and numerical multiplicity and leaves off when it comes to the smallest thing, and rests at something indivisible; but a point is in that which is divisible, and a unit is in another thing. But the One is ‘not in another thing’; it is neither in the divisible nor is it indivisible as being the smallest thing. It [the One] is the greatest of all things, not in extension, but in power. Indeed, even the Beings posterior to it [the intelligibles or noetic realities] are indivisible and without parts through their powers, and not magnitudes.
“The One must be understood to be unlimited not because it cannot be traversed either in extension or number, but by being incomprehensible in its power. For whenever you understand it either as Intellect or as god, it [The One] is more. And again, when you unify it by discursive thinking, then, too, it is more than you imagine, in being more unified than your thinking of it. For it is in itself, since it has no attributes.
“One should think of its unity by means of its self-sufficiency. Of all things it must be the most adequate and self-sufficient and least deficient.
“Further, any multitude, as long as it has not become a unity, is deficient. Its substantiality is deficient relative to being a unity, whereas the One is not deficient of itself. For it is itself. By contrast, what is many needs all the things it is and each of these things, being with the others and not in itself, needs all these other things, and brings about a deficiency both in terms of a unity and terms of being a whole. If then, there must indeed be something entirely self-sufficient, the One alone must be the kind of thing which is deficient relative neither to itself nor to anything else. It seeks nothing, so that it may be, nor that it may be in a good state, nor so that it may be established in the intelligible world. As it is the cause of other things, it does not get what it is from other things. How can its good be outside it? Thus, its good is not an attribute of it; for it is it itself.
“It has no place, for it has no need of a place to settle itself through being unable to support itself. Something which settles is inanimate, a falling mass, as long as it does not settle. Other things settle in a place because of the One. Because of it, they exist at the same time as they take up the place assigned to them. To seek a place is to be in need, and the principle is not in need of things posterior to it.
“The principle of all things is in no need of all things. Anything in need, is in need because it desires the principle. If the One needed something, it would be seeking to be not the One, so it would be in need of what will destroy it. But everything that is said to be in need, needs its good, that is, what preserves it. Thus, there is no good for the One, and so it does not have a will for anything. [I.e., a will for anything other than itself. – translator’s footnote.] It is beyond good and is good not for itself but for other things, insofar as other things can participate in the Good.
“Nor is it intellection, in order that it may have no difference in itself; nor motion, since it is prior to motion and intellection. Indeed, what should it understand? Itself? So, it would be ignorant prior to its intellection, and it would be in need of intellection in order that it would know itself, whereas it is self-sufficient in itself. So, it is not ignorant about itself, on the grounds that it does not know or think itself. For ignorance comes to be about something else, whenever one thing is ignorant of a different thing. It alone neither knows nor does it have anything which it is ignorant about, but being one and one with itself, it needs no intellection of itself.
“So, there is no need to add ‘being with itself’, to preserve its unity. Indeed, one should take away from it both thinking and being with itself and the intellection of itself and of other things. For it should not be ranked with something that thinks, but with the intellection itself. The intellection does not think; it is the cause for something else thinking, and the cause is not identical with what is caused. The cause of everything is none of these things. So, this should not be called ‘good’, which is what it bestows on other things. Rather, it is the Good in another way, above the other goods.”
(Plotinus, The Enneads, translated by a team headed by Lloyd P. Gerson, Second Edition, Cambridge University Press, 2025, pages 893-895, ISBN: 9781009604970)
2.1 This is a sublime section of the Enneads. The whole of Ennead VI is filled with insights and, at a literary level, flows from one section to another like a clear mountain stream.
2.2 This section of the Enneads is focused on unpacking the meaning of unity and the One. Plotinus begins by comparing what one might call transcendental unity with mathematical unity by using concepts such as a mathematical point or a mathematical unit and suggesting that transcendental unity, or philosophical unity, differs from the unity found in a mathematical context. Plotinus writes, “. . . the One is ‘not in another thing’; it is neither in the divisible nor is it [the One] indivisible as being the smallest thing.” In this paragraph Plotinus points to the One, to unity, as beyond mathematical contexts, beyond extension (the context of physics), and beyond magnitudes (such as large and small). “It [the One] is the greatest of all things, not in extension, but in power.”
2.3 Plotinus further unpacks the understanding of the power of the One in the next paragraph, “The One must be understood to be unlimited not because it cannot be traversed either in extension or number, but by being incomprehensible in its power. For whenever you understand it either as Intellect or as god, it is more.” It is therefore beyond discursive thinking because “it has no attributes.”
2.4 It is helpful to note that Plotinus uses both negations and affirmations when discussing the One. For example, Plotinus uses the terms ‘unlimited’ and ‘incomprehensible.’ But Plotinus also uses affirmations to illuminate the nature of the One by referring to the One’s ‘self-sufficiency.’ Plotinus then further unpacks the nature of self-sufficiency in the following paragraph after introducing this perspective.
2.5 The contrast is that all created things are not self-sufficient; they rely on causation to bring them into becoming “. . . whereas the One is not deficient of itself. For it is itself.” In contrast, things need all the things that it is and needs other things as well. But the One is deficient neither to itself nor to anything else. I interpret this as meaning that the One does not arise due to causation; that is to say there are no conditions that give rise to the One. Plotinus puts it this way, “It [the One] seeks nothing, so that it may be.”
2.6 Plotinus then goes on to point out that the One is the cause of other things, but the One does not ‘get’, or become, what it is from other things because the One is prior to all other things, including noetic things.
2.7 Now Plotinus returns to the use of the negations by stating that the One has no place.
2.8 Then Plotinus returns to using an affirmation by referring to the One as ‘the principle of all things’ that is in no need of all things. In McKenna’s translation he refers to a sovereign self-sufficiency as the principle being pointed to, which I find helpful.
2.9 I think it is significant that Plotinus uses both affirmations and negations in this part of the Enneads. I sometimes read that Plotinus is using the approach of negative theology, meaning that the ultimate, or the One, can only be approached through the use of negations. I can understand why people interpret passages like this in that way because the negations are very striking. But if I closely read a passage like this what I observe is a kind of going back and forth between the use of affirmations and negations that suggests that the One is beyond both affirmations and negations. I wouldn’t call this ‘negative theology’; I would be more inclined to call it ‘transcendental theology.’ The difference is that in negative theology all affirmations are rejected as being inadequate, but in transcendental theology the function of both affirmations and negations is to assist the reader in going beyond both affirmations and negations. It is not that these are rejected; rather their context and range are more focused and both affirmations and negations are used to move us into a context that is both beyond, and prior to, any becoming and begoning.
2.9.1 This quote from Plotinus had an impact on Christianity through the writings of Dionysius the Areopagite, in particular his Mystical Theology. The closing of Mystical Theology states that the ultimate is beyond any affirmation or negation. This is consistent with Plotinus’s usage of affirmations and negations in this passage and, I suspect, was directly influenced by this passage.
2.9.2 This section of the Enneads also influenced Maimonides in his treatise The Guide to the Perplexed. This is found in Chapter 57 (I’m using a new translation by Lenn E. Goodman and Phillip I. Lieberman). Maimonides unpacks the ambiguities generated by the way language is used in this context; he suggests using ‘one’ but not ‘oneness’ and other suggestions for structuring language in such a way as to retain clarity in a transcendental context.
2.9.3 And finally this passage appears in the Islamic world in a work known as the Theology of Aristotle; it was thought for a long period that the Theology of Aristotle was written by Aristotle, but it turns out that it is a collection of passages from Plotinus. I don’t know the original source of the confusion, but it appears the collection was a work of Porphyry’s, then was translated into Syriac, and then into Arabic where it had a big influence (that’s quite a journey). I don’t know when it took on Aristotle’s name (presumably Porphyry would not have been confused about that.) But this passage of Plotinus had an impact on a number of Islamic philosophers and theologians.
2.9.4 It would be interesting to see if modern writers who are interested in Plotinus also reference this passage. But that’s a project for another day.