13 April 2026
Brief Notes on Various
Topics - 92
1. The First Principle’s Presence
“Everything imitates the
principle according to its capacity by tending towards eternity and goodness.”
(Plotinus, The
Enneads, Ennead 5.4.1, Second Edition, edited by Lloyd Gerson, Cambridge
University Press, Cambridge, UK, 2025, page 582, ISBN: 978009604970)
“. . . all [things are]
imitating the First Principle as far as they are able by tending to
everlastingness and generosity.”
(Plotinus, The
Enneads, Ennead 5.4.1, That Which is after the First, translated by A. H.
Armstrong, Loeb Classical Library, Harvard University Press, Cambridge,
Massachusetts, 1984, page 143, ISBN: 9780674994898)
“. . . all things to the
utmost of their power imitate the Source in some operation tending to eternity
and to service.”
“Plotinus, The
Enneads, Enneads 5.4.1, The Secondaries and the First, translated by
Stephen MacKenna, Larson Publications, Burdett, New York, 1992, page 461, ISBN:
978943914558)
1.1 There are single sentences in Plotinus that
are exquisite, filled with meaning and beauty.
This is one of those sentences.
1.2 In the clause closing the sentence before the
one quoted Plotinus refers to fire warming things, to snow cooling things. And then he moves into a generalization from
this observation to an insight about ‘all things’. That insight is that all things are imitating
the nature of the ultimate in accordance with their specific, limited,
nature.
How are things imitating
ultimate nature? By generation, by
productive activity. Fire is hot and the
heat of fire produces warmth in objects that are near it. Snow is cold and the coldness of snow cools those
things close to it. I take these to be
analogies to how The One overflows and creates, emanates, generates, the
world. When looked at in this way we can
sense the presence of the One even in ordinary material things. This brings the highest metaphysics of
Plotinus down to the material realm so that the material realm is not
isolated, or separate from, the transcendental.
The transcendental and the material are not the same, but they are related
in a manner that, once recognized, assists the philosopher in his journey of
ascent to the Good and the One.
1.3 I view the phrase ‘eternity and goodness’ as a
way of saying the One and the Good. Here
I would say that ‘eternity’ is a way of speaking about the One. The One is ultimately ineffable, but there
are names for the One that are used to communicate with each other about this
transcendental reality.
Frequently in the
Enneads ‘eternity’ or ‘the eternal’ is used to refer to the noetic, the second
hypostasis, rather than the One. It is
not unusual for Plotinus to use terms that subtly change their meaning
depending on which level, or hypostasis, Plotinus is referring to. And Plotinus does not always signal a shift
of meaning of this kind. As a reader
becomes more familiar with how Plotinus makes these shifts the reader becomes
more tuned in to when that happens.
1.4 It is possible to interpret ‘eternity and
goodness’ as meaning that everything imitates the noetic forms that are the
source of particular things, and following that imitates the ultimate through
generous creativity, or goodness. I can
understand this kind of interpretation because it elegantly encapsulates the
three levels of existence, or hypostases, starting with material things, then
rising to the noetic, and then rising further to the transcendental Good.
But Armstrong’s
translation leans towards seeing this phrase as another way of expressing the
One and the Good. Armstrong translates
that all things are imitating the First Principle and Armstrong does not
distinguish between everlastingness and generosity as to their level, which
hypostasis they reside in; suggesting that both are ways of talking about the
ineffable, the transcendental.
MacKenna seems to be
making the same point when he says that all things are imitating the
‘Source.’ The ultimate source is the
ineffable One. I don’t read MacKenna as
saying that ‘eternity’ and ‘service’ represent names for different hypostases.
It may be the case that
Plotinus is compressing multiple meanings in this sentence and that reading
eternity as referring to the noetic is one reading Plotinus had in mind, while
reading eternity as another way of talking about the ineffable is another
reading. Multiple meanings are not
unusual in Plotinus (or Plato) so it would not surprise me if this is the case
here.
1.5 Ennead 3.7, Eternity and Time, deals with how
Plotinus understands the relationship between these two realities. Plotinus unpacks his understanding of eternity
and time in a way that at first seems complex, but after a second or third
reading it comes into clearer focus. Here
is a quote from Ennead III.7 that I think is relevant to the quote from Ennead 5.4:
“What, then, should we
say eternity is? That it is intelligible
Substance itself, in the same way that one might say that time is the entire
heaven, that is, the cosmos? For they [the
Pythagoreans – translator’s footnote] say that some hold this latter belief
about time. For since we imagine and
think that eternity is something most majestic, and what pertains to the nature
of the intelligible nature is most majestic, and it is not possible to say that
there is something more majestic than either of the two – that which transcends
the intelligible nature may not even be termed ‘majestic’ – one might for these
reasons come to identify them. And a
further reason would be that the intelligible universe and eternity are both inclusive
and include the identical things.
“But when we say that
one set of things [the intelligibles] lies in another – eternity – and
predicate eternity of them – for Plato says that ‘the nature of the model
happened to be eternal’ [Timaeus 37D3 – translator’s footnote] – we mean once
again that eternity is different from the intelligible nature and, quite the
contrary, are maintaining that eternity is related to it or in it or present to
it. But the fact that each is majestic
does not indicate their identity. For
majesty might perhaps also come to one of them from the other. And the inclusiveness of one is of parts, but
the inclusiveness of eternity is that of the whole together not as a part but
because all things that are such as to be eternal are eternal due to eternity.”
(Gerson, see above, page
337)
Here is the passage from
Timaeus, 37D3, that the translator referenced in a footnote:
“Now it was the Living
Thing’s nature to be eternal, but it isn’t possible to bestow eternity fully
upon anything that is begotten. And so
he began to think of making a moving image of eternity: at the same time as he
brought order to the universe, he would make an eternal image, moving according
to number, of eternity remaining in unity.
This number, of course, is what we now call ‘time.’”
(Plato, Complete
Works, edited by John M. Cooper; Timaeus, translated by Donald J. Zeyl, Hackett
Publishing Company, Indianapolis, Indiana, 1997, page 1241, ISBN:
9780872203495)
I see the quote from
Ennead 3.7 as indicating that Plotinus does not consider the intelligible, or
the noetic, and eternity to be the same.
Eternity is present to the intelligible, but I would say that eternity
comes before the intelligible. I suggest
this because the intelligible, that is to say noetic realities, arise due to
differentiation, and the eternal is before differentiation. When the eternal is subject to
differentiation, we get the moving image of eternity that is time.
Eternity and the noetic
are intimately related and because of that noetic objects are eternal; but the
eternity of noetic objects (which, tellingly, Whitehead refers to as eternal
objects) is due to proximity to the One.
Eternity is another way of saying Unity.
The unity of noetic objects is also due to their proximity to the One,
and to their proximity to the Eternal.
1.6 The place that eternity holds in Platonism is
a difficult topic. It is not easy to
sift through what Plotinus says about this and because of that difficulty
people can come to different conclusions.
Some have said that the One is beyond eternity just as the One is beyond
being. But the One is also beyond Unity,
beyond the One. As Plotinus writes,
whatever anyone says about the One falls short of its actuality, for the One is
even beyond actuality. In other words, I
agree that what is ultimate transcends eternity, but I think there are good
reasons to think of ‘eternity’ as a useful name for that which transcends name
and form.
And, to be honest, I
think that Plotinus does use ‘eternity’ as another name for the One; now and
then, not always. Sometimes, perhaps
most of the time, Plotinus uses eternity, or the eternal, when referring to
noetic realities, the intelligibles. But
just as Plotinus will use terms like unity to refer to noetic realities as well
as the unity of the One, so also Plotinus will skillfully unpack eternity in
ways that depend on the level of reality, or hypostasis, that is being referred
to.
1.7 All of the writings of Plotinus are based on
his experiences of the noetic and the transcendental (the intelligible and the
One). Reaching out across the chasm that
separates the material world from that which is incorporeal, Plotinus
illuminates that which is eternal by proximity, and that which is eternal
remaining in unity.
2. Stages of the Practice of Ethical Restraint
There is not a lot of
writing about ethical restraint in the Platonist tradition or in how ethical
restraint is presented in the Dialogues of Plato. But restraint is discussed outside of this
context, and surprisingly it is usually in a therapeutic context, often
centered on addiction. In this kind of
literature ‘restraint’ has a practical focus on how someone can actually
overcome the sensory, and sensual, thing(s) that seem to control their
lives. Often there is a three stage
presentation of how restraint works:
The first stage is avoidance. Sometimes the expression ‘just don’t go
there’ is used; as in an alcoholic should just not go to a bar, or to a party
where alcohol is served. This has
application to a large variety of situations where people are trying to
overcome the seductions of the senses.
The second stage is
sometimes called ‘self-command.’ This is
learning how to make initial steps in internalizing effective resistance to
sensory seductions. A lot of literature
is centered on this second stage and the authors of these works offer simple
means for reminding the person on the path of renunciation (in a lay and
secular context) is helped because most of these suggestions are internal
reminders, sometimes prayers, that serve to deflect the seduction of the senses
when it appears. It might be as simple
as ‘day after day I will reject alcohol.’
Or it might be simpler, ‘I reject alcohol.’ Or it might be longer such as the much used
Serenity Prayer. The Serenity Prayer
might be condensed to the person saying ‘courage’ in their mind to remind them
to pull away from what is tempting them.
This second stage is a
kind of internal civil war where old and powerful habits are being contested by
a new perspective. This conflict between
the older way of life with the possibility of a new way of life can become
intense. These internalized sayings, or
prayers, are reminders that the individual wants to move into a new situation and
wants to give up on habits that are self-destructive.
The third stage is
sometimes called ‘mastery’ but I prefer the term ‘stability’ meaning that the
change to a new way of living has stabilized and the internal civil war is
basically over. There is a greater sense
of calm and also a feeling of accomplishment.
Of course it is always possible to slide back into old habits and for
that reason the practices of the second stage remain a part of the person’s
inner life.
I don’t recall in
Platonist literature this kind of analysis where the stages of renunciation are
discussed; it might be in the literature somewhere, but I don’t recall running
across it. My feeling is that this kind
of information would be something that would be discussed between teacher and
student rather than being the topic of an essay; or at least it looks that way
to me.
In the Platonist
literature there is some indication that people did fall away from the
practices of ethical restraint. For
example, in the opening section of Porphyry’s On Abstinence, Porphyry
writes to Firmus, a friend of Porphyry’s, that Porphyry has heard that Firmus
has fallen away from vegetarianism and returned to eating meat. Porphyry views this as Firmus having given up
on the Way of Philosophy and is writing to Firmus to encourage him to return to
a philosophical life, a vegetarian life.
This kind of falling
away is common; it happens to many people.
Overcoming sensual seductions, even when a person knows that succumbing
to them is unhealthy and damaging to themselves and others, is not easy. Knowing this, one can be sympathetic. The important thing is to encourage the
individual who has fallen away from their renunciation practice to try
again. It may take many tries. But that’s OK. Just keep trying and eventually the new way
of life will establish itself, stabilize itself.
3. William Lane Craig
William Lane Craig is a
Protestant Christian Apologist. Craig
has a large following. Craig has studied
philosophy extensively and is familiar with contemporary approaches to
philosophy. Craig is familiar with logic
and modern modes of analysis from the analytic tradition (a surprising number
of Christian apologists use tools from the analytic tradition in their work). Craig is an effective apologist for his
tradition.
Craig has written one
book (“God Over All: Divine Aseity and the Challenge of Platonism”), and posted
several videos, where he criticizes adopting Platonist metaphysics in the
Christian tradition (this is more common in the Protestant tradition than it is
in Catholicism or Orthodoxy). Craig is
aware of the influence that Platonism has had on Christianity, but Craig thinks
that the Platonic influence undermines Christianity in significant ways.
If I understand Craig
correctly, Craig is disturbed by the way Plato talks about intelligibles, or
noetic objects, also known as eternal objects.
Craig refers to these as ‘forms’ which is a standard usage. Craig’s understanding of Platonic forms is
that they are eternal and unchanging; that’s true, I mean that the forms are
understood to be that way in Platonism.
But Craig argues that this undermines the uniqueness of God because
being eternal and unchanging are characteristics of God that are considered by
Craig in the exegetical tradition he grows out of, to be unique characteristics
of God. It follows that this undermines
the independence and uniqueness of God because there are other things in the
cosmos that share at least some of the attributes of God.
Craig offers that a way
of resolving this, which Craig argues is something that at least some Christian
Platonists took, is to reconfigure the forms as ‘ideas in the mind of
God.’ I think Craig is right that this
is a way that Christians can retain a sense of the noetic while at the same
time arguing for the uniqueness, the divine aseity, of God. However, according to some histories of
Platonism I have read, the view that Platonic forms are ideas in the mind of
God was put forward in a Platonist context among the Middle Platonists and was
likely absorbed into Christianity from those resources.
Personally, I prefer a
more traditional way of viewing the forms; that the forms are emanations of the
One, of the fully transcendental, of God.
The difference between the forms and the One is that the forms are
differentiated from each other whereas the One is undifferentiated unity that
is beyond differentiation, before differentiation. If you want to understand the presence of
differentiation in the forms, consider that the eternity of the forms
differentiates them from all that is ephemeral.
In addition, forms are differentiated from each other, but at the same time fully transparent to each other.
The view that forms are
ideas in the mind of God collapses the noetic realm into the realm of that
which is ultimate; in this case God.
From this perspective, the three hypostases now become two and the
noetic realm of forms disappears.
I think that Craig thinks
of God as having characteristics which is standard Christian theology; with the
exception of some Christian mysticism.
In contrast the One is beyond characteristics and beyond being. The One is beyond affirmation and negation,
whereas the forms do have characteristics and traits.
The discussion between
Christianity and Platonism has been going on for two thousand years. The discussion has a dialectical feel to it
in the sense that both sides are committed to uncovering metaphysical
truth. I think the differences between
the two traditions is a kind of creative, fire producing, light giving, presence
that has led participants to focus on certain issues intensely. I think that is a good thing.
(As an aside, when I say
these kinds of discussions have a long history, a good example of this centered
on a treatise written by Proclus called On the Eternity of the World. It contains eighteen arguments for the eternity
of the world. It is my personal favorite
of the works of Proclus. This work was
disliked by Christians because Christians have the view that the world was created
by God and will end at some point in the future as part of God’s plan. From this perspective the world is not
eternal. In response to this treatise of
Proclus, a Christian writer, Philoponus, wrote a critique of this work by
Proclus titled Against Proclus on the Eternity of the World. I think I have mentioned this before on this
blog, but it has been a while and I think it fits in with the discussion about
William Lane Craig. The dispute between Proclus
and Philoponus is not exactly the same point of divine aseity, but both of them
are engaged in distinguishing Christianity from Platonism; and I think the
points they raise are related.)
4. Haiku
The sound of spring wind
Isn’t the same as the
sound
Of eternity.